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Sex-Specific Mortality from Asbestos-Related Diseases, Lung and Ovarian Cancer in Municipalities with High Asbestos Consumption, Brazil, 2000-2017

The aim of this study is to compare the mortality rates for typical asbestos-related diseases (ARD-T: mesothelioma, asbestosis, and pleural plaques) and for lung and ovarian cancer in Brazilian municipalities where asbestos mines and asbestos-cement plants had been operating (areas with high asbesto...

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Published in:International journal of environmental research and public health 2022-03, Vol.19 (6), p.3656
Main Authors: Saito, Cézar Akiyoshi, Bussacos, Marco Antonio, Salvi, Leonardo, Mensi, Carolina, Consonni, Dario, Fernandes, Fernando Timoteo, Campos, Felipe, Cavalcante, Franciana, Algranti, Eduardo
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creator Saito, Cézar Akiyoshi
Bussacos, Marco Antonio
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Algranti, Eduardo
description The aim of this study is to compare the mortality rates for typical asbestos-related diseases (ARD-T: mesothelioma, asbestosis, and pleural plaques) and for lung and ovarian cancer in Brazilian municipalities where asbestos mines and asbestos-cement plants had been operating (areas with high asbestos consumption, H-ASB) compared with in other municipalities. The death records for adults aged 30+ years were retrieved from multiple health information systems. In the 2000-2017 time period, age-standardized mortality rates (standard: Brazil 2010) and standardized rate ratios (SRR; H-ASB vs. others) were estimated. The SRRs for ARD-T were 2.56 for men (257 deaths in H-ASB municipalities) and 1.19 for women (136 deaths). For lung cancer, the SRRs were 1.33 for men (32,604 deaths) and 1.19 for women (20,735 deaths). The SRR for ovarian cancer was 1.34 (8446 deaths). Except for ARD-T and lung cancer in women, the SRRs were higher in municipalities that began using asbestos before 1970 than in municipalities that began utilizing asbestos from 1970 onwards. In conclusion, the mortality rates for ARD-T, and lung and ovarian cancer in municipalities with a history of asbestos mining and asbestos-cement production exceed those of the whole country. Caution is needed when interpreting the results of this ecological study. Analytical studies are necessary to document the impact of asbestos exposure on health, particularly in the future given the long latency of asbestos-related cancers.
doi_str_mv 10.3390/ijerph19063656
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subjects Adult
Asbestos
Asbestos - toxicity
Asbestosis
Brazil - epidemiology
Carcinoma, Ovarian Epithelial
Cement
Cities
Codes
Comorbidity
Disease
Ecological effects
Ecological studies
Fatalities
Female
Hospitals
Humans
Information systems
Italy
Latency
Lung
Lung cancer
Lung diseases
Lung Neoplasms
Male
Mesothelioma
Morphology
Mortality
Municipalities
Occupational Exposure
Ovarian cancer
Ovarian Neoplasms
Plaques
Population
Statistical analysis
Tumors
Womens health
title Sex-Specific Mortality from Asbestos-Related Diseases, Lung and Ovarian Cancer in Municipalities with High Asbestos Consumption, Brazil, 2000-2017
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