• Etiologie

  • Facteurs exogènes : Exposition professionnelle

A cohort incidence study of workers exposed to perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA)

Menée aux Etats-Unis à partir des données des dossiers médicaux de 3 713 salariés issus d'une cohorte précédemment constituée de 32 254 participants, cette étude évalue l'association entre une exposition professionnelle à de l'acide perfluorooctanoïque et le risque de maladies, dont le risque de cancer

Objectives : Determine if perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) is associated with an incident disease in an occupational cohort. Methods : We interviewed 3713 workers or their next of kin in 2008–2011, and sought medical records for self-reported disease. These workers were a subset of a previously studied cohort of 32 254 community residents and workers. We estimated historical PFOA serum levels via a job-exposure matrix based on over 2000 serum measurements. Non-occupational exposure from drinking water was also estimated. Lifetime serum cumulative dose (combining occupational and non-occupational exposure) was our exposure metric. We studied 17 disease outcomes with more than 20 validated cases. Results : The median measured serum level was 113 ng/mL in 2005 (n=1881), compared with 4 ng/mL in the US. Ulcerative colitis (10-year lag) showed a significant trend (p≤0.05) with increasing dose (quartile rate ratios (RRs)=1.00, 3.00, 3.26, 6.57, n=28, p for trend=0.05), similar to earlier findings in the community study. Rheumatoid arthritis (no lag) showed a positive trend in a categorical trend test (RRs=1.00, 2.11, 4.08, 4.45, n=23, p for trend=0.04). Positive non-significant trends were also observed for prostate cancer, non-hepatitis liver disease and male hypothyroidism, which have been implicated in other studies. A significant negative trend was found for bladder cancer and asthma with medication. No marked trends were seen for high cholesterol, which had been seen in the community study. Conclusions : Ulcerative colitis and rheumatoid arthritis were positively linked to PFOA exposure among workers. Data were limited by small numbers, under-representation of hard-to-trace decedents and few low-exposed referents.

Occupational and Environmental Medicine 2015

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