Welding fumes and lung cancer: a meta-analysis of case-control and cohort studies

Author:

Honaryar Manoj KumarORCID,Lunn Ruth MORCID,Luce Danièle,Ahrens WolfgangORCID,’t Mannetje Andrea,Hansen JohnniORCID,Bouaoun Liacine,Loomis DanaORCID,Byrnes GrahamORCID,Vilahur NadiaORCID,Stayner Leslie,Guha NeelaORCID

Abstract

BackgroundAn estimated 110 million workers are exposed to welding fumes worldwide. Welding fumes are classified by the International Agency for Research on Cancer as carcinogenic to humans (group 1), based on sufficient evidence of lung cancer from epidemiological studies.ObjectiveTo conduct a meta-analysis of case-control and cohort studies on welding or exposure to welding fumes and risk of lung cancer, accounting for confounding by exposure to asbestos and tobacco smoking.MethodsThe literature was searched comprehensively in PubMed, reference lists of relevant publications and additional databases. Overlapping populations were removed. Meta-relative risks (mRRs) were calculated using random effects models. Publication bias was assessed using funnel plot, Eggers’s test and Begg’s test.ResultsForty-five studies met the inclusion criteria (20 case-control, 25 cohort/nested case-control), which reduced to 37 when overlapping study populations were removed. For ‘ever’ compared with ‘never’ being a welder or exposed to welding fumes, mRRs and 95% CIs were 1.29 (1.20 to 1.39; I2=26.4%; 22 studies) for cohort studies, 1.87 (1.53 to 2.29; I2=44.1%; 15 studies) for case-control studies and 1.17 (1.04 to 1.38; I2=41.2%) for 8 case-control studies that adjusted for smoking and asbestos exposure. The mRRs were 1.32 (95% CI 1.20 to 1.45; I2=6.3%; 15 studies) among ‘shipyard welders’, 1.44 (95% CI 1.07 to 1.95; I2=35.8%; 3 studies) for ‘mild steel welders’ and 1.38 (95% CI 0.89 to 2.13; I2=68.1%; 5 studies) among ‘stainless steel welders’. Increased risks persisted regardless of time period, geographic location, study design, occupational setting, exposure assessment method and histological subtype.ConclusionsThese results support the conclusion that exposure to welding fumes increases the risk of lung cancer, regardless of the type of steel welded, the welding method (arc vs gas welding) and independent of exposure to asbestos or tobacco smoking.

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Reference78 articles.

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3. Carcinogenicity of welding, molybdenum trioxide, and indium tin oxide;Guha;Lancet Oncol,2017

4. International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC). Evaluation of carcinogenic Risks to humans: Arsenic, metals, fibres, and dusts. 100 C, 2012.

5. Exposure to Inhalable, Respirable, and Ultrafine Particles in Welding Fume

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