Incidence and Mortality of Prostate Cancer in Commercial Airline Cockpit Crew: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

Hadia Khanani, G. McClintock, H. Fernando, G. Heller, R. Asher, Cindy Garcia, David P. Smith, I. Getley, N. Ahmadi, Norbert Doeuk, S. Leslie, Niruban Thanigasalam, H. Woo
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Abstract

Commercial airline cockpit crew (CCC) are potentially exposed to occupational risk factors that may have detrimental health effects. However, available literature on prostate cancer (PCa) as a health outcome is conflicted. Therefore, this review of cohort studies aims to evaluate the incidence of and mortality from PCa in CCC based on studies published to date. PubMed, Medline, EMBASE and SCOPUS were searched from 1946 to April 2021. Cohort studies reporting standardized incidence ratios (SIR) and/or standardized mortality ratios (SMR) of PCa in CCC were included. Military, cabin crew and service personnel data were excluded. Independent data extraction was conducted, and study quality assessed. Standardized ratios were pooled using a fixed effects model and expressed with 95% confidence intervals. 75 studies were assessed for eligibility from which 6 involving 129 374 licensed CCC were included in the final analysis: Two reported incidence only, 1 incidence and mortality and 3 reported mortalities only. The pooled SIR for PCa in CCC was 1.41 (95% CI 1.17 to 1.71) with moderate heterogeneity (I2 = 53%) however, the pooled SMR was not statistically significant (1.08; 95% CI 0.94 to 1.24) also with moderate heterogeneity (I2 = 70%). The available evidence shows that CCC are at a higher risk of developing PCa but there is no evidence to suggest a similarly higher risk of death from the disease. The effect of early detection through PSA testing in this cohort is unclear. Occupational exposure to radiation and sleep disturbance may play a role, but clear evidence of additional risk is lacking. Our review indicates that most evidence is dated and to confidently assess contemporary health outcomes of CCC, further research is required.
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商业航空公司座舱机组人员前列腺癌的发病率和死亡率:系统回顾和荟萃分析
商业航空公司驾驶舱机组人员可能面临可能对健康产生有害影响的职业风险因素。然而,关于前列腺癌(PCa)作为一种健康结果的现有文献是矛盾的。因此,这篇队列研究综述的目的是基于迄今发表的研究,评估前列腺癌在CCC中的发病率和死亡率。检索自1946年至2021年4月的PubMed、Medline、EMBASE和SCOPUS。纳入了报告CCC中PCa标准化发病率(SIR)和/或标准化死亡率(SMR)的队列研究。军人、机组人员和服务人员的数据不包括在内。进行独立数据提取,并评估研究质量。标准化比率采用固定效应模型合并,并以95%置信区间表示。我们对75项研究的合格性进行了评估,其中6项涉及1229374例获得许可的CCC纳入最终分析:2项仅报告发病率,1项报告发病率和死亡率,3项仅报告死亡率。CCC中PCa的合并SIR为1.41 (95% CI 1.17 ~ 1.71),具有中等异质性(I2 = 53%),但合并SMR无统计学意义(1.08;95% CI 0.94 ~ 1.24)也具有中等异质性(I2 = 70%)。现有证据表明,CCC患者发生前列腺癌的风险较高,但没有证据表明该疾病导致死亡的风险也较高。在这个队列中,通过PSA检测早期检测的效果尚不清楚。职业暴露于辐射和睡眠障碍可能起作用,但缺乏额外风险的明确证据。我们的回顾表明,大多数证据都是过时的,为了自信地评估CCC的当代健康结果,需要进一步的研究。
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