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1/8/2009
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| A series of 421 malignant pleural mesotheliomas, diagnosed in the
Trieste-Monfalcone area, northeastern Italy, were reviewed.
A large majority of the patients had been employed in naval work
(shipbuilding, maritime trades, and dock work). Latency
periods (time intervals between first exposure to asbestos and
death), showed wide variations from one occupational category
to another. Such variations were attributable, but only partly, to
differences in the intensity of the exposure to asbestos. Various
family cases were identified, including people with and without blood
relationships. The data, obtained in the studies on
Trieste-Monfalcone mesothelioma, suggest that interactions between
asbestos and other factors play a considerable role in the
pathogenesis of asbestos-related mesothelioma.
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Med Lav 1997 Jul-Aug;88(4):310-5 |
| Following the finding of an unexpected cluster of mesotheliomas in
textile workers, a surveillance system of malignant
mesotheliomas was implemented in the region of Tuscany, Italy. This
article reports on the investigation of 124 cases of
mesothelioma diagnosed and reviewed by the Institutes of Morbid
Anatomy and Histopathology at the Universities of Florence,
Pisa, and Siena between 1970 and 1988. A complete occupational and
asbestos exposure history was assessed through a
semi-structured questionnaire directly administered to resident cases
of Tuscany or, if deceased, to their closest living relatives,
for a total of 100 interviews. The hypothesis of past occupational
asbestos exposure was verified and documented.
Seventy-two cases have been classified as occupationally exposed to
asbestos; four were classified in the category of possible
domestic exposure to asbestos. For two others, the role of other
risk . |
| A case-control study on pleural malignant mesothelioma (MM) was
conducted in Casale Monferrato, where the largest Italian
asbestos cement (AC) factory had been operating from 1907 to 1985. In
a previous study we observed a five to seven-fold
increase in the incidence of MM among people living in that city and
never employed in the factory mentioned. The present
study includes cases of MM with histological diagnosis over the
period 1.1.1987-30.6.1993 among residents in the Local
Health Unit (LHU) of Casale Monferrato. Population controls were
randomly extracted from the list of the residents in the
LHU, matched to cases on , date of birth, vital status and date of
death. Cases and controls (or their closest relative) were
interviewed with a standardised questionnaire focusing on asbestos
exposure in the (life-long) residential and occupational
histories and in leisure time activities as well as on occupational
a. |
| The authors briefly reviewed the literature concerning the risk
factors for primary pleural tumors in humans. The results from the
most relevant studies emphasize the fact that the large majority of
mesotheliomas are associated with exposure to asbestos or
asbestiform fibers. Exposure to asbestos is mainly through industrial
use, and mesotheliomas result from occupational,
para-occupational, or environmental exposure. Fibers of crocidolite,
amosite, and chrysotile appear to be, in descending order,
more carcinogenic for pleural tissues. The authors summarize the
available data on consumption of asbestos and
asbestos-based products in Italy. The chrysotile-asbestos mine in
Balangero (Piedmont) stimulated the industrial production of
asbestos-cement; asbestos has been largely sprayed among shipyards
and user for insulating railroad coaches and carriages.
Italy had the greatest consumption of crocidolite in Europe, whi. |
| In stating that a threshold of effect has never been found for asbestos, Rall
stands behind the outdated one fiber can kill theory of carcinogenesis.
However, Rall fails to mention data supporting a threshold for chrysotile in
lung cancer (11, asbestosis (12), and mesothelioma (13) as well as a panel
report from the Health Effects Institute-Asbestos Research (HEI-AR) detailing
animal and in vitro dose-response studies exhibiting no-observed adverse effect
levels (NOAELs) for asbestos (14). Our recent work documents a dose-dependent
increase in asbestos-induced proto-oncogene activation in mesothelial cells with
no induction at lowest concentrations of fibers tested and an enhanced potency
of crocidolite asbestos in comparison to chrysotile (15). |
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