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Asbestos and Disease PDF

542 Pages·1978·11.743 MB·English
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ENVIRONMENTAL SGIENGES An Interdisciplinary Monograph Series Editors: DOUGLAS H. K. LEE, E. WENDELL HEWSON, and DANIEL OKU Ν A complete list of titles in this series appears at the end of this volume. Asbestos and Disease By Irving J. Selikoff Director, Environmental Sciences Laboratory Mount Sinai School of Medicine of the City University of New York New York, New York Douglas H. K. Lee Consultant, Mount Sinai School of Medicine of the City University of New York New York, New York formerly Associate Director, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences Research Triangle Park North Carolina with the active collaboration of Henry A. Anderson Ε. Cuyler Hammond Coleman B. Rabin Philip Chahinian Duncan A. Holaday Arthur N. Röhl Jacob Churg Milton Kannerstein Robert J. Schnitzer Susan Daum Arthur M. Langer Herbert Seidman Theodore Ehrenreich Ruth Lilis Yasunosuke Suzuki Alf Fischbein William J. Nicholson Alvin S. Teirstein Mount Sinai School of Medicine of the City University of New York New York, New York ® Academic Press New York San Francisco London 1978 A Subsidiary of Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, Publishers COPYRIGHT © 1978, BY ACADEMIC PRESS, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. NO PART OF THIS PUBLICATION MAY BE REPRODUCED OR TRANSMITTED IN ANY FORM OR BY ANY MEANS, ELECTRONIC OR MECHANICAL, INCLUDING PHOTOCOPY, RECORDING, OR ANY INFORMATION STORAGE AND RETRIEVAL SYSTEM, WITHOUT PERMISSION IN WRITING FROM THE PUBLISHER. ACADEMIC PRESS, INC. Ill Fifth Avenue, New York, New York 10003 United Kingdom Edition published by ACADEMIC PRESS, INC. (LONDON) LTD. 24/28 Oval Road, London NW1 7DX Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Selikoff, Irving J Asbestos and disease. (Environmental sciences) Bibliography: p. 1. Asbestosis. 2. Asbestos—Toxicology. 3. Asbestos industry—Hygienic aspects. I. Lee, Douglas Harry Kedgwin, 1905- joint author. II. Title. III. Series. [DNLM: 1. Asbestos— Adverse effects. 2. Disease—Etiology. QV610S465a] RC775.A8S44 615.9'25'39224 77-25735 ISBN 0-12-636050-2 PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA 80 81 82 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 Foreword The essence of the relationship of man to his environment is the ratio of benefit to risk. Asbestos, a naturally occurring fibrous material, is a startling example of a material at once uniquely useful, because of its physical and chemical properties, and at the same time potentially hazardous to man. Evidence linking inhalation of asbestos fiber to the development of a group of diseases is generating ever-growing concern. The demonstrated risks involve the worker exposed in manufacture and use of asbestos, residents of neighborhoods of asbestos manufacturing plants, and the members of households of the asbestos worker. The benefits of asbestos, however, merit an assessment of the nature of the hazard, the extent of the hazard, and the possibilities for control of the hazard. Asbestos exposure can result in both inflammatory and neoplastic disease: asbestosis, lung cancer, and mesothelioma. Epidemiologic studies show a minimal but consistent increased risk to cancer of the gastrointestinal tract in workers with asbestosis. The identification of neoplastic disease as a consequence of asbestos fiber inhalation resulted in two findings of major significance to students of occupational and environmental disease. The first relates to the universally recognized concept of multiple causes of cancer of all sites in man, e.g., lung cancer, and the second to the appearance in significant numbers of a heretofore rare form of cancer, mesothelioma. Evaluating the many factors critical to the causation and control of asbestos-related disease requires 1. Study of its distribution and prevalence in man 2. Analysis of the specific host and environment interface (work- place, general ambient environment, consumer product) within the more general compartments of the environment (air, water, food) xi xii Foreword 3. Determination of the sequential response of the lungs and other target organs with particular emphasis on changes crucial to the evolu- tion of disease 4. Measurement of the impact of efforts to control exposure to asbestos Determining the extent of asbestos-related disease, i.e., the scope of the populations at risk, the attack rate, and the identification of specific diseases, is currently the major task at hand. Factors such as the follow- ing must be considered: 1. Dose response and threshold/no adverse effect level. This highly controversial, generic issue in carcinogenesis has special relevance to asbestos-related disease in view of the occurrence of cancer in those paraoccupationally exposed. In experimental models as well as in man, dose response and no adverse effect levels of exposure have been demonstrated. 2. Extrapolation from animal to man and from high-dose to low-dose exposure. The relevance of experimental animal data for man and the extrapolation of findings from high-dose exposure to low-dose expo- sure is critical for new agents to be introduced into the environment and, for asbestos, is of importance as a factor in establishing acceptable levels of exposure. 3. Interaction of environmental agents in the causation of cancer. Lung cancer rates in asbestos workers clearly reflect the combined effect of cigarette smoking and asbestos exposure. This observation is fully compatible with the principles of cofactors in cancer causation and with the current information on the pathogenesis of this disease. Controlling hazards and evaluating the effectiveness of such controls also involve a number of problems, one of which is the difference in the epidemiologic data available for various groups within the population at risk and, in particular, the lack of reliable data with respect to the general population. The lack of exposure data at the time of initiation and during the latency of asbestos-related disease is frustrating, and the authors of this text have clearly and responsibly addressed this issue. Also, effective control must be a joint effort of management, labor, and government. Even when the scientific and technological compo- nents are all considered, regulation is still primarily a social determina- tion, and the changing attitude of society toward risk is another factor that complicates an already complex situation. This book affords a much-needed comprehensive compendium and presentation of accumulated information on asbestos and disease. De- spite the necessity for the authors to take one or another side of the Foreword xiii controversial aspects of asbestos-related disease, the text is one that addresses the problems and lessons to be learned from an agent as- sociated with hazard to man during uncontrolled exposure. Throughout the text one finds a continuous thread of extensive experience in the field and authority. Paul Kotin Johns-Manville Corporation Denver, Colorado Preface It is said that there are only two occasions on which it is justifiable to write of a country: after three weeks of residence when one is impressed by the opening of new vistas and not aware of subtleties that may inhibit firm conclusions, or after thirty years of residence when the nuances have been experienced and a mature judgment is possible. Much the same could be said for writing a monograph on an environ- mentally induced disease: either an early exposition of some newly recognized disease effect as was done in 1974 for vinyl chloride, or a comprehensive review of the situation revealed by extensive observa- tion and research on a continuing problem. The time has come when such a comprehensive review of disease caused by exposure to asbestos is not merely possible but badly needed. With the number of articles on the subject in the world litera- ture at about the three thousand mark, it is manifestly absurd to expect every person who has some responsibility for or interest in disease prevention to be familiar with all of the aspects covered, or to be forced to resolve many of the conflicting views presented. Even those who have expert knowledge of one aspect, be it clinical effects or engineer- ing control, may well need guidance on other aspects. With this realization in mind, we decided to take advantage of the wide range of specialists available at the Mount Sinai School of Medicine, not only in the Environmental Sciences Laboratory but also in the various divisions of the School, and prepare an account that would place the entire problem in perspective and help the various specialists communicate and cooperate more easily than they may have been able to do in the past. Their range of interests is wide indeed: physicians, laboratory aides, industrial hygienists, plant managers, XV xvi Preface legal representatives, organized labor, environmentalists, public health officers, economists, and (most importantly) students in any of these fields. The major aims of this work are to provide nonspecialists in each of the fields listed above with easily comprehensible and meaningful data; with knowledge that will enable them to discuss problems intelligently with their colleagues and help them appreciate the value of their con- tributions as well as the limitations of their current knowledge; and with access to technology other than their own without swamping them and discouraging them with excessive detail. To include all of the detail that specialists in a field would consider relevant would result in a set of volumes, not a useful monograph. In any case, specialists have their own sources of information and would be unlikely to turn to a review for guidance in their field. We have sought, therefore, to digest the specialist information applicable to the asbestos problem, and to pre- sent it in a manner that will be easily understood by the person trained in some other field, while at the same time indicating the current limitations as well as the strengths of the information available. In this spirit, the radiographs as well as the figures and plates are simply illustrative of points made in the text. An exhaustive presentation would have required a volume of its own. To permit, even to encourage, the reader to probe further, we have included a fairly extensive Bibliography that covers historical as well as current information and lists sources that include the various issues of some complex and still incompletely resolved problems. Some selection has been exercised, of course, since it would have been impractical to list all of the some three thousand references in our files, and even the diligent search of the literature that we have made will inevitably have missed some relevant and potentially important items. In an Adden- dum we have noted some of the highlights of information that became available to us between submission of the manuscript and the finaliza- tion of page proofs. The symbol [A] at the end of a paragraph indicates that additional information is included in the Addendum. In the process of organizing the available clinical and etiological information, it became clear that the ground rules for judging the information had never really been defined. An attempt to formulate such rules for our own use led us to the famed Koch postulates that provided the judgmental framework for so many generations of bac- teriologists and clinicians. While the phrasing of the original postulates (in whatever version one selects) was too rigid for our purposes, they did suggest a modified version that would be applicable to agents producing chronic, environmentally induced diseases such as those that attend exposure to asbestos. These are set out in Chapter 6, and we Preface xvii have followed them in reviewing evidence for the incrimination of asbestos in each of the four disease processes: parenchymal asbestosis, pleural asbestosis, mesothelioma, and carcinoma associated with expo- sure to asbestos. We believe that in doing so we have presented a model for etiological judgment on long term environmental effects in general. The recognition of four chronic disease processes induced by asbes- tos is not new, but we hope that our insistence on the separation of the processes will help clarify future considerations of the clinical response. In Chapters 7 through 12 we have reviewed the pathological and clinical consequences of these four processes separately; but, as set out at the end of Chapter 6, an individual case may be found to have almost any combination of the four. The analysis into four processes is essential for the understanding of disease responses, but the acceptance of combina- tion is equally essential for clinical assessment of the individual case. As in almost any medical field, and perhaps more than in most, controversy still exists on some matters of both causation and control. As individuals, we naturally have come to our own conclusions, but we have tried to present the evidence for and against the various interpre- tations, so that readers can attempt their own assessments if they wish. As new evidence emerges, opinions must necessarily change to ac- commodate it. While not pretending to be a concordia discordantium, the book does aspire to present a reasonable resolution of some outstanding conflicts of opinion. What is presented in this book is the current set of conclusions we have drawn from evidence that has built up over the years; new demonstrations could change them, but they are believed to represent the ones most justified by what we now know. Summariza- tion of technical information invariably leads to the elimination of some information deemed unessential to the statement. If in doing so we have omitted an item that some specialist cherishes more warmly, we can only claim editorial privilege for such lapses from grace. It will be evident to the reader that we have adopted a historical approach in many instances, particularly in matters of etiology. We hope the reader will find these as interesting and as fascinating as we did, even though they may again fight some forgotten battles. Insofar as information derived from the Mount Sinai investigations is concerned, we have given references where the material has already appeared in print, but we have generally refrained from citing unpublished reports and working documents prepared for granting and other agencies. Data for which bibliographic references are not given can be taken as emanating from our own studies. As with all reviewers, our debt to past writers is enormous. It would be impossible at this stage to determine the exact influence exerted by each and every one of the documents we have read; their substance has xviii Preface long since melded with memories of things read and opinions formed. The list of names in the Bibliography covers only a fraction of those to whose ideas we have been exposed. We apologize to those who may feel that they, too, should have been cited by name. As for those who have materially aided us in the preparation of this book, our indebted- ness is almost as extensive. From the long list we must select Mrs. Julia Roberts, who amended and reamended many magnetic card versions with remarkable equanimity and skill; Mrs. Doris Fleisher, who or- ganized and coordinated the various aspects of production; and Mrs. Janet Kaffenburgh who traced many of the historical references that we sought. We gratefully acknowledge the excellent drafting of the figures by Lewis Hollander. Finally, we must draw attention to the active role played by the collaborators listed on the title page. Where they prepared definitive sections, their names have been cited in the text; but their contributions went far beyond that in reading all of the manuscript, often in more than one version, and in making numerous suggestions for revision, many of them vital. In truth, they are part authors of this book, whose names would appear as such did publishing technicalities permit. We are very appreciative of the willingness with which Dr. John Harington and Dr. Paul Kotin accepted the onerous task of going through ad- vanced revisions of the manuscript and of giving us their advice on both substance and form. They, like our collaborators, are absolved from any responsibility for the final version, for which we must accept complete responsibility. The preparation of the book was supported by a grant (R-53B) from the American Cancer Society, but the work of the Laboratory has had support from numerous sources beside the Mount Sinai School of Medicine, notably in recent years from the National Institute of En- vironmental Health Sciences, Department of Health, Education and Welfare (Grant No. ES 00928). For all of this support we are deeply grateful. Very special appreciation must be accorded the officers of the International Association of Heat and Frost Insulators and Asbestos Workers (IAHFIAW), and those of the Locals that cooperated in many of the studies carried out by Mt. Sinai investigators. Without this coopera- tion, our understanding of the disease processes would have been greatly retarded. Irving J. Selikoff Douglas H. K. Lee* * Present address: Nazareth 5-1, Deer Hill Road, St. Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands 00801.

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