Occupational exposure to endocrine disruptors and lymphoma risk in a multi-centric European study

British Journal of Cancer
Laura CostasS de Sanjosé

Abstract

Incidence rates of lymphoma are usually higher in men than in women, and oestrogens may protect against lymphoma. We evaluated occupational exposure to endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs) among 2457 controls and 2178 incident lymphoma cases and subtypes from the European Epilymph study. Over 30 years of exposure to EDCs compared to no exposure was associated with a 24% increased risk of mature B-cell neoplasms (P-trend=0.02). Associations were observed among men, but not women. Prolonged occupational exposure to endocrine disruptors seems to be moderately associated with some lymphoma subtypes.

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Citations

Aug 20, 2016·Occupational and Environmental Medicine·Mayte Martín-BustamanteLaura Costas
May 14, 2020·Revista brasileira de epidemiologia = Brazilian journal of epidemiology·Luiza Taciana Rodrigues de MouraMaria Paula Curado
Oct 8, 2020·Toxicology and Industrial Health·Haowei FuQian Xu

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Software Mentioned

MC
SOC
Epilymph
SIMEX

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