4.6 Article

Case-control study on lung cancer and residential radon in western Germany

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY
Volume 153, Issue 1, Pages 42-52

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/aje/153.1.42

Keywords

case-control studies; lung neoplasms; radon; smoking

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In a 1990-1996 case-control study in western Germany, the authors investigated lung cancer risk due to exposure to residential radon. Confirmed lung cancer cases from hospitals and a random sample of community controls were interviewed by trained interviewers regarding different risk factors. For 1 year, alpha track detectors were placed in dwellings to measure radon gas concentrations. The evaluation included 1,449 cases and 2,297 controls recruited from the entire study area and a subsample of 365 cases and 595 controls from radon-prone areas of the basic study region. Rate ratios were estimated by using conditional logistic regression adjusted for smoking and for asbestos exposure. In the entire study area, no rate ratios different from 1.0 were found; in the radon-prone areas, the adjusted rate ratios for exposure in the present dwelling were 1.59 (95% confidence interval (Cl): 1.08, 2.27), 1.93 (95% Cl: 1.19, 3.13), and 1.93 (95% Cl: 0.99, 3.77) for 50-80, 80-140, and >140 Bq/m(3), respectively, compared with 0-50 Bq/m(3). The excess rate ratio for an increase of 100 Bq/m(3) was 0.13 (-0.12 to 0.46). An analysis based on cumulative exposure produced similar results. The results provide additional evidence that residential radon is a risk factor for lung cancer, although a risk was detected in radon-prone areas only, not in the entire study area.

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