Use of a Canadian population-based surveillance cohort to test relationships between shift work and breast, ovarian, and prostate cancer
Auteurs: M. Anne Harris, Jill MacLeod, Joanne Kim, Manisha Pahwa, Michael Tjepkema, Paul Peters, et Paul A. Demers
Aperçu
Résumé (français)
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Résumé (anglais)
Objectives Shift work with circadian disruption is a suspected human carcinogen. Additional population-representative human studies are needed and large population-based linkage cohorts have been explored as an option for surveillance shift work and cancer risk. This study uses a surveillance linkage cohort and job-exposure matrix to test relationships. Methods We estimated associations between shift work and breast, ovarian, and prostate cancer using the population-based Canadian Census Health and Environment Cohort (CanCHEC), linking the 1991 Canadian census to national cancer registry and mortality databases. Prevalence estimates from population labour survey data were used to estimate and assign probability of night, rotating, or evening shifts by occupation and industry. Cohort members were assigned to high (>50%), medium (>25 to 50%), low (>5 to 25%), or no (<5%) probability of exposure categories. Cox proportional hazards modelling was used to estimate associations between shift work exposure and incidence of prostate cancer in men and ovarian and breast cancer in women. Results The cohort included 1 098 935 men and 939 520 women. Hazard ratios (HRs) indicated null or inverse relationships comparing high probability to no exposure for prostate cancer: HR = 0.96, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 0.91-1.02; breast cancer: HR = 0.94, 95% CI = 0.90-0.99; and ovarian cancer: HR = 0.99, 95% CI = 0.87-1.13. Conclusions This study showed inverse and null associations between shift work exposure and incidence of prostate, breast, or ovarian cancer. However, we explore limitations of a surveillance cohort, including a possible healthy worker survivor effect and the possibility that this relationship may require the nuanced exposure detail in primary collection studies to be measurable.
Détails
Type | Article de journal |
---|---|
Auteur | M. Anne Harris, Jill MacLeod, Joanne Kim, Manisha Pahwa, Michael Tjepkema, Paul Peters, et Paul A. Demers |
Année de pulication | 2020 |
Titre | Use of a Canadian population-based surveillance cohort to test relationships between shift work and breast, ovarian, and prostate cancer |
Volume | 64 |
Nom du Journal | Annals of Work Exposures and Health |
Numéro | 4 |
Pages | 387-401 |
Langue de publication | Anglais |
- M. Anne Harris
- M. Anne Harris, Jill MacLeod, Joanne Kim, Manisha Pahwa, Michael Tjepkema, Paul Peters, et Paul A. Demers
- Use of a Canadian population-based surveillance cohort to test relationships between shift work and breast, ovarian, and prostate cancer
- Annals of Work Exposures and Health
- 64
- 2020
- 4
- 387-401