Occupational cancer


Occupational cancer is cancer caused by occupational hazards. Several cancers have been directly tied to occupational hazards, including chimney sweeps' carcinoma, mesothelioma, and others.

Common occupational hazards implicated in cancer

Occupational exposure to chemicals, dusts, radiation, and certain industrial processes have been tied to occupational cancer. Exposure to cancer-causing chemicals may cause mutations that allow cells to grow out of control, causing cancer. Carcinogens in the workplace may include chemicals like anilines, chromates, dinitrotoluenes, arsenic and inorganic arsenic compounds, beryllium and beryllium compounds, cadmium compounds, and nickel compounds. Dusts that can cause cancer leather or wood dusts, asbestos, crystalline forms of silica, coal tar pitch volatiles, coke oven emissions, diesel exhaust and environmental tobacco smoke. sunlight; radon gas; and industrial, medical, or other exposure to ionizing radiation can all cause cancer in the workplace. Industrial processes associated with cancer include aluminum production; iron and steel founding; and underground mining with exposure to uranium or radon. Shift work, which can disturb the circadian rhythm, has also been identified as a risk factor for some forms of cancer, in particular for breast cancer.
Other factors that play a role in cancer include:
Common cancers and their exposures and occupations include:
CancerSourceExamples of Occupations
BladderBenzidine, beta-naphthylamine,
4-aminobiphenyl, arsenic
Rubber, leather, paving, roofing,
printing and textile industries; paint/
dyeing products; chimney sweeping;
machinists; hairdressers and barbers;
truck drivers
KidneyCadmium, trichloroethylene, herbicides,
wood dust
Painting; metalworking; petroleum,
plastics, and textile industries
LarynxAsbestos, wood dust, paint fumesMetal working; petroleum, rubber,
plastics, and textile industries
LeukemiaFormaldehyde, benzene, ethylene
oxide, pesticides
Rubber manufacturing; oil refining;
shoemaking
LiverArsenic, vinyl chloride, aflatoxinsPlastic manufacturing
LungRadon, secondhand smoke, asbestos,
arsenic, cadmium, chromium compounds,
diesel exhaust, sulfur mustard
Rubber manufacturing, paving,
roofing, painting, chimney sweeping,
iron and steel foundry work, welding
LymphomaBenzene, 1, 3-butadiene, ethylene
oxide, herbicides, insecticides
Rubber manufacturing, painting,
hairdresser or barber
MesotheliomaAsbestosMining, railroad, automotive,
plumbing, painting and construction
industries; factory workers
Nasal cavity and sinusMustard gas, nickel dust, chromium
dust, leather dust, wood dust, radium
Textile and baking industry, flour
milling, nickel refining, furniture and
cabinet builders, shoemaking
SkinArsenic, coal tars, paraffin, certain oils,
sunlight
Chimney sweeping; outside jobs that
involve a lot of sun exposure

Epidemiology

An estimated 48,000 cancers are diagnosed yearly in the US that come from occupational causes; this represents approximately 4-10% of total cancer in the United States. It is estimated that 19% of cancers globally are attributed to environmental exposures.

Prevention

Many occupational cancers are preventable. Personal protective gear, workplace controls, and worker education can prevent exposure to carcinogens in the workplace. Tobacco smoking has also been shown to increase the risk of work-related cancers; decreasing or abstaining from smoking can decrease cancer risk.
Agencies like the US Food and Drug Administration, Environmental Protection Agency, the International Agency for Research on Cancer and Occupational Safety and Health Administration have developed safety standards and limits for chemical and radiation exposure.