职业暴露与非传染性疾病的叙述性回顾。

IF 1.8 4区 医学 Q3 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Annals Of Work Exposures and Health Pub Date : 2024-07-08 DOI:10.1093/annweh/wxae045
Susan Peters, Karina Undem, Svetlana Solovieva, Jenny Selander, Vivi Schlünssen, Karen M Oude Hengel, Maria Albin, Calvin B Ge, Katarina Kjellberg, Damien M McElvenny, Per Gustavsson, Henrik A Kolstad, Anne Mette L Würtz, Bendik C Brinchmann, Karin Broberg, Stine Fossum, Merete Bugge, Mette Wulf Christensen, Manosij Ghosh, David Høyrup Christiansen, Suzanne L Merkus, Lars-Kristian Lunde, Eira Viikari-Juntura, Annett Dalbøge, Daniel Falkstedt, Morten Vejs Willert, Anke Huss, Else Toft Würtz, Orianne Dumas, Inge Brosbøl Iversen, Mimmi Leite, Christine Cramer, Jorunn Kirkeleit, Cecilie Svanes, Håkan Tinnerberg, Judith Garcia-Aymerich, Anne Vested, Pernilla Wiebert, Karl-Christian Nordby, Lode Godderis, Roel Vermeulen, Anjoeka Pronk, Ingrid Sivesind Mehlum
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:在将暴露组概念应用于工作生活健康的健康与职业研究暴露组项目范围内,我们旨在提供有关多种非传染性疾病(NCD)的职业暴露和相关健康影响的知识现状的广泛概述,以帮助确定研究重点:我们对 6 类非传染性疾病(非恶性呼吸系统疾病、神经退行性疾病、心血管/代谢性疾病、精神障碍、肌肉骨骼疾病和癌症)中可被视为 "有一致证据表明存在关联 "或 "关联证据有限/不充分 "的职业风险因素进行了叙述性综述。评估是在专家会议上进行的,主要以系统综述为基础,辅以叙述性综述、报告和原始研究。随后,根据暴露-反应关系、性别差异、关键时间窗、相互作用和研究质量不足等方面的缺失信息,确定了知识缺口:结果:我们确定了 200 多种职业暴露与 60 多种 NCD 中的一种或多种疾病相关的一致或有限/不充分证据。各种暴露被确定为多种结果的可能风险因素。例如,柴油发动机废气和镉与肺癌的关系证据一致,但与其他癌症部位、呼吸系统、神经退行性疾病和心血管疾病的关系证据有限/不充分。其他例子包括重体力劳动、轮班工作和决策纬度/工作控制。对于证据有限/不充分的关联,需要进行新的研究来确认关联。对于证据一致的风险因素,改进研究设计、暴露评估和病例定义可以更好地理解其关联性,并有助于为基于健康的阈值水平提供信息:通过概述职业暴露与其健康影响之间的知识差距,我们的叙述性综述将有助于确定职业健康研究的优先事项。未来的流行病学研究应优先考虑包括大样本量、评估疾病发病前的暴露以及量化暴露。在原始研究和系统综述中,都需要识别和考虑潜在的偏差和混杂因素。
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Narrative review of occupational exposures and noncommunicable diseases.

Objective: Within the scope of the Exposome Project for Health and Occupational Research on applying the exposome concept to working life health, we aimed to provide a broad overview of the status of knowledge on occupational exposures and associated health effects across multiple noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) to help inform research priorities.

Methods: We conducted a narrative review of occupational risk factors that can be considered to have "consistent evidence for an association," or where there is "limited/inadequate evidence for an association" for 6 NCD groups: nonmalignant respiratory diseases; neurodegenerative diseases; cardiovascular/metabolic diseases; mental disorders; musculoskeletal diseases; and cancer. The assessment was done in expert sessions, primarily based on systematic reviews, supplemented with narrative reviews, reports, and original studies. Subsequently, knowledge gaps were identified, e.g. based on missing information on exposure-response relationships, gender differences, critical time-windows, interactions, and inadequate study quality.

Results: We identified over 200 occupational exposures with consistent or limited/inadequate evidence for associations with one or more of 60+ NCDs. Various exposures were identified as possible risk factors for multiple outcomes. Examples are diesel engine exhaust and cadmium, with consistent evidence for lung cancer, but limited/inadequate evidence for other cancer sites, respiratory, neurodegenerative, and cardiovascular diseases. Other examples are physically heavy work, shift work, and decision latitude/job control. For associations with limited/inadequate evidence, new studies are needed to confirm the association. For risk factors with consistent evidence, improvements in study design, exposure assessment, and case definition could lead to a better understanding of the association and help inform health-based threshold levels.

Conclusions: By providing an overview of knowledge gaps in the associations between occupational exposures and their health effects, our narrative review will help setting priorities in occupational health research. Future epidemiological studies should prioritize to include large sample sizes, assess exposures prior to disease onset, and quantify exposures. Potential sources of biases and confounding need to be identified and accounted for in both original studies and systematic reviews.

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来源期刊
Annals Of Work Exposures and Health
Annals Of Work Exposures and Health Medicine-Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
CiteScore
4.60
自引率
19.20%
发文量
79
期刊介绍: About the Journal Annals of Work Exposures and Health is dedicated to presenting advances in exposure science supporting the recognition, quantification, and control of exposures at work, and epidemiological studies on their effects on human health and well-being. A key question we apply to submission is, "Is this paper going to help readers better understand, quantify, and control conditions at work that adversely or positively affect health and well-being?" We are interested in high quality scientific research addressing: the quantification of work exposures, including chemical, biological, physical, biomechanical, and psychosocial, and the elements of work organization giving rise to such exposures; the relationship between these exposures and the acute and chronic health consequences for those exposed and their families and communities; populations at special risk of work-related exposures including women, under-represented minorities, immigrants, and other vulnerable groups such as temporary, contingent and informal sector workers; the effectiveness of interventions addressing exposure and risk including production technologies, work process engineering, and personal protective systems; policies and management approaches to reduce risk and improve health and well-being among workers, their families or communities; methodologies and mechanisms that underlie the quantification and/or control of exposure and risk. There is heavy pressure on space in the journal, and the above interests mean that we do not usually publish papers that simply report local conditions without generalizable results. We are also unlikely to publish reports on human health and well-being without information on the work exposure characteristics giving rise to the effects. We particularly welcome contributions from scientists based in, or addressing conditions in, developing economies that fall within the above scope.
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