Philip Morris
Exposure - Response : Asbestos and Mesothelioma
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- Liddell, Fdk
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- BIBL, BIBLIOGRAPHY
- CHAR, CHART, GRAPH, TABLE, MAPS
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- Attachment
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- Health + Safety Commission
- Thetford Mines
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- Smither
- Doll
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Liddell FDK. Exrwsura-response: asbestos and mn,wtbelioma. Eur Respir Rrv 1993; 3; 11.
98-99.
(1991.I2.18; with addendum 1993.03.11)
Exposure-Response: Asbestos and Mesothelioma
F D K LiDDELL
Departmenu of Epidemiology and Biostarisucr, MeCi11 Urriw.rsiry, Montreal, Canada
Abstract In each cohort in wbich it can be examined satisfacsarily, the relationship between
duration of asbestos exposm and the risk of inesothelioma is direct, and several are quite
strong. It is thus clear tha+e aso very powerful exposure-resporLse relationships. There is
good evidence that these relationships are sub-linear at very short durations of exposure and
probably again at rather long durations of exposure. The likelihood is that the underlying
relationship is sigmoid, regardless of fibre type.
In their report to the Health and Safety Commission in 1985, Doll and Peto' stated that, although
the predicted
risk of mcsothelioma increased in approximate proportion to duration of asbestos exposure for
exposures of up
to about 10 years, there was very little difference between the predicted effects of stopping or
contituiing
exposure after 20 years. However, tlose examination of their data suggests a much more positive
conclusion.
Table I displays three models of risk. Not surprisingly, the over-simplified Model I is quite
inadequate. The
fit by Model 2, which has been used by Peto and cotivo:kers,= appears somewhat better, but the
goodness-of-fit
;e ststistic (Sdf) is 2.+6.5, associated with a P-value of 0.00007. Model 3, ascribed to Peto and
endorsed by Doll
and Peto,' yields a corresponding statistic of 7.2, suggesting a vtxy good fit; the great
improvement over
Model 2 arose from the incorporation of tlse term for duration of exposure - see the last Line of
Table 1. A
formal test of the degree of improvement was carried out by fitting exponential models including 1)
lapse and
2) lapse and duration; the second term decreased the Likelihood Ratio statistic by 9.8 (using I
extra degree of
freedom), an improvement of enormous statistical significanec, While it is true therz was no death
from
mesotfselioun among those with 30 or more years of service, tfse expected number of deaths even on
Mode13
was so low the shortfall was quite insignificant; further, for men with 20-29 years of scheduled
service, there
were nearly twice as many cases as expected. Thus it seeaaS reasonable to claim that the risk of
mcsotbelioma
increased in approximate proportion to the duration of exposure up to at least 30 years.
Table 1. - Three models of inesothelioaa risk in terms of
subject-years, lapse, ands3uration of exposure.
Model S risk « subject-years
Model 2 risk K(lapse)3-2 x subjeet-years
Model 3 risk -((lapse)4 -(lapse - duration)4] x subject-years
which, except for rather long durations,
can be taken as:
risk K(duration) x(lapse)3 x subject-years
or effectively Model 2 modified by a
"linear" term for duration
.
I

Table 2 lists all 12 cohort studies in which exatnitution of exposure-response is possible, giving
the numbers
of deaths from mesothelioma. A test for traud of risk in relation to duration of exposure has bew
carried out
where possible, and the relevant Xz statistic is included in Table 2. T6a seven unbracketed
statistics ara
associated with P-values betweea 0.051 and 0.0005; even using the most conservative approach to the
test of
the overall null hypothesis. and taking ail four bracSceted statistics as zsro, yields an extremely
low P-value.
Table 2. - Cohorts of asbestos workers with deaths from mesothelioma and risks in
relation to duration of exposure
No of
deaths Test for
trend * t Tumour-free Zumours
duration $ expected S
Crocidolite
Mining (Wittenoom, WA)3
31
(5.0)
90 days
-/
Mining (Cape, RSA)' 20 5.6 12 months 2.4
Gas mask assembly (Nottingham, UX)s 16 11.6 5 months 1.5
unosit:e
Insulation products manufacture ([JS)6
14
9.7
5 months
0.9
Mining (Transvaal, RSA)4 4 (2.0) 3 months 0.5
'H3JCt t7reS'
Mining (amphiboles) (RSA)4
6
(2.5)
3 months
- /
Factory (Barking, UK)7 '
Males 60 15.4 I No relevant data
Females 25 (0.3) No relevant data
Asbestos--ceaent plant 2 (New Orleans, US)s
> 75 t its pipe aiarea
6
3.8
4 months
-~
5 75 t in pipe area 2 6.0 2S years 0.1
Textile factory (Rochdale, iTPC) ' 10 9.8 1 year 0.7 **
ChrysotZZe
Mining (Thetford Mines, FQ)'
7
(1.4)
6 months
-~
* x= statistic with 1 degree of freedom; but see 1.
t Figures in brackets are unreliable due to small numbers or other technical reasons.
t There were no mesotheliomas among persons exposed for these periods; see text.
S Number of taesotheliotuas expected fraa linear trend.
~ Number of inesotheliomas expected frcxa linear trend cannot be calculated.
i 2 degrees of freedom.
** Calculated from Model 3.
In each of the tat cohorts where adequate infotatatioa was pr+ovided, tlsere was a duration of
exposztte, as
shost as 3 months or as long u?3 years, which was 'tumotts frx; see Table 2. No mesotheliotm'bas
boea
reportod among persons employed for such short periods. '13te final column of Table 2 gives the
numbers of
aoesotbeiioaias that would have been expected in these pe:iods on the basis of proportionality. All
these numbers
are of course sma11, but diey total 6.1. Sub-linear response to short durations of exposure may, at
worst, be
taken as hypothesized by McDonald and McI?onald." Excluding the findings"-' from their Table 4
provides a
legitimate test: observing zero where 3.7 were expected yields P- 0.0247.
From this, it tnight be argued that exposure for at least 3 months is a necessary condition for the
development
of asbestos-related tnesothelioma. This concept of threshold cannot yet be sustained on the evidence
available:
what can be claimed is that, for short durations, theexposure-rr.spotue relationship is sub-linear.
Toxicological
evidence would suggest a sigmoid relationship, with the point of inflexion somewhere near the EDs,.
However,
.-L~ - 2

the findings in man are for such low 'doses' that the risk might have been thought to increase
more-or-less
exponentially - but this is certainly not the epidemiological finding.
Finally, the evidence of Browne and Smither" must be mentioned. At first sight, it runs bounter to
the
findings discussed here. However these authors' results cannot be evaluated because no
'denominators' are
available; it is entirely possible that the distribution, by duration of employment, of all Cape
Asbestos employees
over the years were so highly skewed that there is no real contradiction with the present findings.
Two further
faCtots must be borne in mind: the Cape Asbestos experience dates back many decades when intensities
of
exposure were unthinkably high; and a substantial proportion of 'short-service cases' may in fact
have arisen
from neighbourhood exposure, which was known to have been far from negligible near the Barking plant
in
which the great majority of the cases had worked.
Addendum - 1993.03.11
It has recently been reported'= that, among 10,926 Quebec asbestos wOrkers bom 1891-1920 and
follow+ed to
the end of 1988, there have beea 33 suspected mesotlseliomas in all; of these, eight and 20 were in
miners and
millers from Asbestos and from the Thetford Mines region, respectively, and five were among men
employed
in a small asbestos products factory in Asbestos. There were no aasa of mesothelioma among the 4438
taun
employed for less than tweyeara, eight c ases among those 2448 employed for 2-10 years, and 25
mesotheliomas
among tbe 4040 mea with at least 10 years employment. This information supersedes that in the last
line of
Table 2, so that there have now been twelve cohorts with a'tumour-free' duration, and the numbers
expected
in these periods now tota17.3. Again excluding the findings from references 5. and 6., the
legitimate test
becomes of zero observed, where 4.9 were expected, and yields P= 0.007.
Referexxs
1. Doll R, Peto J. Effects on Health of E:cposure to.lshestos. Health and Safety Commission. London:
HMSO,
pp 33-40.
2. Peto J, Seidman H, Selikoff U. Mesotheliotna mortality in asbestos workers: implications for
models of
rarcinogenesis and risk assessment. Br 1 Cancer 1982; 45: 124-135.
3. De Kleric NH, Armstrong BK, Musk AW, Hobbs MST. Cancex mortality in relation to measures of
oaxipational exposure to crocidolite at Wittenoom Gorge. Br 1 lnd Med 1989; 46: 529-536.
4. Sluis-Cremer GK, Liddell FDK, Logan WPR, Bezuidenhout BN. The mortality of amphibole miners in
South Africa, 1946-80. Br .l Ind Med 1992; 49 : 566-575.
5. Jones JSP, Pooley FD, Sawle GW, Smith PG, Berry G, Wignall BK, Aggarwal A. The consequences of
exposure to asbestos dust in a war-time gas mask factory. In: Wagaer IC (Ed). BFoJogfcctl,Efferts of
Mineral i+tbres. IARC Scientific Publications 30. Lyon: International Agency for Resarch on Cancer,
1980, pp 637-653.
6. Seidman H, Selikoff 1J, Gelb SK. Mortality experience of amosite factory workers: dose-response
relationships 5 to 40 years after onset of short-term work exposure. Atn ! Ind Med 1986; 10: 479.
7. Newhouse ML, Berry G, Wagner JC. Mortality of factory workets in east London 1933-80. Br 1 Ind
Med
1985; 42 5-11. '
8. Hughes JM, Weill H, Hanuttad YY. Mortality of workers employed in two asbestos cement
manufacturing
plants. Br.7 Ind Med 1987; 44: 161-174. '
9. Liddell D. Epidemiological observations on mesothelioma and their implications for
non-occupational
exposure to asbestos. In: Spengler JD, Ur3csynak H, McCarthy JF, Lee H (Eds). Symposium on Health
Ueats ofF.xposure to Asbestos in Buildings, Decrmber 14-15,1Sa&3 Cambridge MA: Harvard University
Energy and Environmental Policy Center 1989, pp 47-69.
10. McDonald JC, McDonald AD. Epidemiology of Mesothelioma. In: L.iddell D, Miller K (Eds). Mineral
Fibers and Heulth. Boca Raton, Florida: CRC Press 1991, pp 147-168.
11. Browrse K, Smither WJ. Asbestos-related mesotheliocm: factors discriminating between pleural and
peritoneal sites. Br11nd Med 1983; 40: 145-152.
12. McDonald AD, Liddell FDK, McDonald JC. Malignant mesothelioma in Quebec chrysotile miners and
milless: a preliminary report. In: Proceedings of the 9th Intrrnational Symposium on Epidemiology in
Occupationa! Health, Cincinnati, Ohio, September, 1992. In press.
3
