Occupational Medicine Advance Access originally published online on February 22, 2007
Occupational Medicine 2007 57(4):246-253; doi:10.1093/occmed/kqm002
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Occupational female breast and reproductive cancer mortality in British Columbia, Canada, 195094
1 Cancer Control Research Program, BC Cancer Agency, Vancouver, BC, Canada
2 Department of Statistics, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada
3 Department of Health Care and Epidemiology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada
Background It has been postulated that recent increases in female breast and reproductive cancers may be, in part, attributable to occupational exposures.
Aim We aimed to identify occupational associations with female breast and reproductive cancer mortality among women living in British Columbia (BC), Canada.
Methods Casecontrol methods were used to calculate mortality odds ratios for occupation and cause of death information obtained from the provincial death registry. Cases included women 20 years of age or older who died from breast or reproductive cancer between 1950 and 1994 and resident in BC, Canada. Controls were randomly selected from non-cancer deaths, matched according to age at death and year of death. In a subsequent, stratified analysis, we also identified changes over time to breast and reproductive cancer mortality among each worker group.
Results There was excess mortality from breast and ovarian cancer among teachers, nurses, secretaries, librarians, retail sales clerks and religious workers. An elevated risk of breast cancer mortality was also found among professionals employed as owners, managers and government officials, financial saleswomen, scientists, physicians, medical and dental technicians and accountants. Secretaries, telephone operators and musicians were at increased risk of death from endometrial cancer. Cervical cancer mortality was not significantly increased for any occupational classification.
Conclusions Our study was aimed primarily at hypothesis generation. More systematic reviews, including cancer registry studies, will prove useful for confirming the relationships we have observed, including a possible increase in the risk of breast and ovarian cancer mortality among women employed in professional occupations.
Keywords Cervical cancer; endometrial cancer; female breast cancer; mortality odds ratio; occupational mortality; ovarian cancer
Correspondence to: Amy C. MacArthur, Cancer Control Research Program, BC Cancer Agency, 675 West 10th Avenue, Vancouver, BC V5Z 1L3, Canada. Tel: +1 604 675 8000; fax: +1 604 675 8180; e-mail: amacarthur{at}bccrc.ca