Occupational exposures and 20-year incidence of COPD: the European Community Respiratory Health Survey

Author:

Lytras TheodoreORCID,Kogevinas Manolis,Kromhout Hans,Carsin Anne-Elie,Antó Josep M,Bentouhami Hayat,Weyler Joost,Heinrich Joachim,Nowak Dennis,Urrutia Isabel,Martinez-Moratalla Jesús,Gullón José Antonio,Pereira-Vega Antonio,Raherison-Semjen Chantal,Pin Isabelle,Demoly Pascal,Leynaert Bénédicte,Villani Simona,Gislason Thorarinn,Svanes Cecilie,Holm Mathias,Forsberg Bertil,Norbäck DanORCID,Mehta Amar J,Probst-Hensch Nicole,Benke Geza,Jogi Rain,Torén KjellORCID,Sigsgaard Torben,Schlünssen Vivi,Olivieri Mario,Blanc Paul D,Vermeulen Roel,Garcia-Aymerich JudithORCID,Jarvis DeborahORCID,Zock Jan-Paul

Abstract

BackgroundOccupational exposures have been associated with an increased risk of COPD. However, few studies have related objectively assessed occupational exposures to prospectively assessed incidence of COPD, using postbronchodilator lung function tests. Our objective was to examine the effect of occupational exposures on COPD incidence in the European Community Respiratory Health Survey.MethodsGeneral population samples aged 20–44 were randomly selected in 1991–1993 and followed up 20 years later (2010–2012). Spirometry was performed at baseline and at follow-up, with incident COPD defined using a lower limit of normal criterion for postbronchodilator FEV1/FVC. Only participants without COPD and without current asthma at baseline were included. Coded job histories during follow-up were linked to a Job-Exposure Matrix, generating occupational exposure estimates to 12 categories of agents. Their association with COPD incidence was examined in log-binomial models fitted in a Bayesian framework.Findings3343 participants fulfilled the inclusion criteria; 89 of them had COPD at follow-up (1.4 cases/1000 person-years). Participants exposed to biological dust had a higher incidence of COPD compared with those unexposed (relative risk (RR) 1.6, 95% CI 1.1 to 2.3), as did those exposed to gases and fumes (RR 1.5, 95% CI 1.0 to 2.2) and pesticides (RR 2.2, 95% CI 1.1 to 3.8). The combined population attributable fraction for these exposures was 21.0%.InterpretationThese results substantially strengthen the evidence base for occupational exposures as an important risk factor for COPD.

Funder

Please see full funding statement in the manuscript

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine

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