Title of article :
Bladder/lung cancer mortality in Blackfoot-disease (BFD)-endemic area villages with low (<150 μg/L) well water arsenic levels – An exploration of the dose–response Poisson analysis
Author/Authors :
Lamm، نويسنده , , Steven H. and Robbins، نويسنده , , Shayhan A. and Zhou، نويسنده , , Chao and Lu، نويسنده , , Jun and Chen، نويسنده , , Rusan and Feinleib، نويسنده , , Manning، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Abstract :
Objective
mine the analytic role of arsenic exposure on cancer mortality among the low-dose (well water arsenic level <150 μg/L) villages in the Blackfoot-disease (BFD) endemic area of southwest Taiwan and with respect to the southwest regional data.
n analyses of the bladder and lung cancer deaths with respect to arsenic exposure (μg/kg/day) for the low-dose (<150 μg/L) villages with exposure defined by the village median, mean, or maximum and with or without regional data.
s
the village median well water arsenic level as the exposure metric introduced misclassification bias by including villages with levels >500 μg/L, but use of the village mean or the maximum did not. Poisson analyses using mean or maximum arsenic levels showed significant negative cancer slope factors for models of bladder cancers and of bladder and lung cancers combined. Inclusion of the southwest Taiwan regional data did not change the findings when the model contained an explanatory variable for non-arsenic differences. A positive slope could only be generated by including the comparison population as a separate data point with the assumption of zero arsenic exposure from drinking water and eliminating the variable for non-arsenic risk factors.
sion
ncer rates are higher among the low-dose (<150 μg/L) villages in the BFD area than in the southwest Taiwan region. However, among the low-dose villages in the BFD area, cancer risks suggest a negative association with well water arsenic levels. Positive differences from regional data seem attributable to non-arsenic ecological factors.
Keywords :
bladder cancer , lung cancer , Blackfoot-disease area , Dose–response , Arsenic
Journal title :
Regulatory Toxicology and Pharmacology
Journal title :
Regulatory Toxicology and Pharmacology