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 1 Mortality among a cohort of garment workers exposed to formaldehyde: an update
Authors Pinkerton-LE; Hein-MJ; Stayner-LT 
Source Occup Environ Med 2004 Mar; 61(3):193-200 
Link http://oem.bmj.com/cgi/content/abstract/61/3/193 
NIOSHTIC No. 20025636 
AbstractTo evaluate the mortality experience of 11,039 workers exposed to formaldehyde for three months or more in three garment plants. The mean time weighted average formaldehyde exposure at the plants in the early 1980s was 0.15 ppm but past exposures may have been substantially higher. Vital status was updated through 1998, and life table analyses were conducted. Mortality from all causes (2206 deaths, standardised mortality ratio (SMR) 0.92, 95% CI 0.88 to 0.96) and all cancers (SMR 0.89, 95% CI 0.82 to 0.97) was less than expected based on US mortality rates. A non-significant increase in mortality from myeloid leukaemia (15 deaths, SMR 1.44, 95% CI 0.80 to 2.37) was observed. Mortality from myeloid leukaemia was greatest among workers first exposed in the earliest years when exposures were presumably higher, among workers with 10 or more years of exposure, and among workers with 20 or more years since first exposure. No nasal or nasopharyngeal cancers were observed. Mortality from trachea, bronchus, and lung cancer (147 deaths, SMR 0.98, 95% CI 0.82 to 1.15) was not increased. Multiple cause mortality from leukaemia was increased almost twofold among workers with both 10 or more years of exposure and 20 years or more since first exposure (15 deaths, SMR 1.92, 95% CI 1.08 to 3.17). Multiple cause mortality from myeloid leukaemia among this group of workers was also significantly increased (8 deaths, SMR 2.55, 95% CI 1.10 to 5.03). Results support a possible relation between formaldehyde exposure and myeloid leukaemia mortality. Previous epidemiological studies supporting a relation between formaldehyde exposure and leukaemia mortality have been primarily of formaldehyde exposed professional groups, not formaldehyde exposed industrial workers. Limitations include limited power to detect an excess for rare cancers such as nasal and nasopharyngeal cancers and lack of individual exposure estimates. 
KeywordsMortality-data; Mortality-rates; Garment-workers; Workers; Worker-health; Work-environment; Occupational-exposure; Exposure-levels; Formaldehydes; Occupational-health; Epidemiology; Cancer 
ContactDr. L E Pinkerton, Epidemiology Section, Industrywide Studies Branch, Division of Surveillance, Hazard Evaluations and Fields Studies, The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, 4676 Columbia Parkway, R-15, Cincinnati, OH 45226, USA 
CODENOEMEEM 
Publication Date20040301 
Document TypeJournal Article 
Email AddressLPinkerton@cdc.gov 
Fiscal Year2004 
NTIS Accession No. 
NTIS Price 
Issue of Publication
ISSN1351-0711 
NIOSH DivisionDSHEFS; EID 
Source NameOccupational and Environmental Medicine 
StateOH 
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