Occupational asbestos exposure and survival among lung cancer patients.
By: Hugo Noelle, Olivia Pérol, Maurice Pérol, Virginie Avrillon, Elodie Belladame, Jérôme Fayette, Françoise Fournié, Aurélie Swalduz, Juliette Dessemon, Jean-Yves Blay, Eve-Marie Neidhardt, Pierre Saintigny, Mayeul Tabutin, Maxime Boussageon, Delphine Praud, Barbara Charbotel, Beatrice Fervers

Département Prévention Cancer Environnement, Centre Léon Bérard, Lyon, France; Faculté de médecine, Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1, 8 Avenue Rockefeller, 69003 Lyon, France; Service d'évaluation économique en santé, Pôle de Santé Publique, Hospices Civils de Lyon, 69003 Lyon, France. Electronic address: hnoelle.contact@gmail.com.
2022-8-2; doi: 10.1016/j.lungcan.2023.107182
Abstract

Objective

This study investigated the association between occupational asbestos exposure (OAE) and survival in patients with histologically confirmed lung cancer (LC).

Methods

This monocentric study was conducted in the Comprehensive Cancer Centre Léon Bérard, Lyon, France. A systematic screening has been in place since 2014 for occupational exposure to carcinogens using a self-assessment questionnaire sent to all patients newly diagnosed with histologically confirmed LC identified through the multidisciplinary LC board from 2014 to 2019. When the physician suspected a work-related exposure from the questionnaire including job history, an occupational cancer consultation was carried out to detail carcinogen exposures and assess if the LC was work-related. Demographics, clinical characteristics and survival data were extracted from medical records. The association between asbestos exposure and overall survival (hazard ratio and 95% confidence intervals) was estimated by Cox proportional hazards regression.

Results

Overall, 702 patients were eligible to the present study, including 180 patients with OAE. In the crude analysis, LCs assessed as moderately or highly attributable to OAE were associated with decreased overall survival (HR = 1.32, 95 %CI 1.04-1.67) compared to LC without OAE or with a low degree of imputability to OAE (median follow-up 28.8 months). After adjustment for confounding (age at diagnosis, smoking status, stage, brain metastasis at diagnosis, and histology), the association of OAE with overall survival was no longer statistically significant (HR = 1.21, 95 %CI 0.94-1.56).

Conclusion

Overall survival in occupationally asbestos exposed LC patients may be decreased in comparison with non-exposed LC patients, warranting further investigations in larger studies.



Copyright © 2023 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

PMID:37001440






Copyright 2026 InterMDnet | Privacy Policy | Disclaimer | System Requirements