4 results on '"Langseth, Hilde"'
Search Results
2. Prediagnostic Serum Organochlorine Concentrations and Metastatic Prostate Cancer: A Nested Case–Control Study in the Norwegian Janus Serum Bank Cohort.
- Author
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Koutros, Stella, Langseth, Hilde, Grimsrud, Tom K, Barr, Dana Boyd, Vermeulen, Roel, Portengen, Lutzen, Wacholder, Sholom, Beane Freeman, Laura E, Blair, Aaron, Hayes, Richard B, Rothman, Nathaniel, and Engel, Lawrence S
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PROSTATE cancer risk factors , *ORGANOCHLORINE compounds , *POLYCHLORINATED biphenyls , *INSECTICIDES , *METASTASIS , *BLOOD serum analysis , *ENVIRONMENTAL exposure , *PROSTATE tumors , *HYDROCARBONS , *LONGITUDINAL method , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *DATA analysis , *CASE-control method , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *PROBABILITY theory , *STATISTICS , *ODDS ratio - Abstract
Background: Organochlorine (OC) insecticides and polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) have been shown to have estrogenic, antiestrogenic, or antiandrogenic properties; as a result, the impact of exposure to these compounds and risk of hormonal cancers, such as prostate cancer, is a concern. Objectives: We conducted a nested case–control study, using prospectively collected serum, to estimate associations between OC exposures and metastatic prostate cancer in a population-based cohort from Norway. Methods: Sera from 150 cases and 314 controls matched on date of blood draw, age at blood draw, and region was used to determine concentrations of 11 OC pesticide metabolites and 34 PCB congeners. Odds ratios (ORs) and 95% confidence intervals (95% CIs) for quartiles of lipidcorrected metabolite levels were calculated using conditional logistic regression. Results: Metastatic prostate cancer was two times as likely among men with serum concentrations of oxychlordane in the highest quartile compared with those in the lowest quartile (OR = 2.03; 95% CI: 1.03, 4.03; p-trend 0.05). Elevated but nonsignificant ORs were estimated for the highest versus lowest quartile of heptachlor epoxide, HCB, and mirex, although these exposures were correlated with oxychlordane. Findings for specific PCB congeners showed a significant inverse association between natural log-transformed lipid-adjusted PCB 44 and metastatic prostate cancer (OR = 0.74; 95% CI: 0.56, 0.97; p-trend = 0.02). Conclusions: Our study highlights the importance of estimating associations with specific OC chemicals and suggests a possible role of OC insecticides and PCBs in the etiology of metastatic prostate cancer. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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3. Cancer Mortality in Workers Exposed to Organochlorine Compounds in the Pulp and Paper Industry: An International Collaborative Study.
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McLean, David, Pearce, Neil, Langseth, Hilde, Jäppinen, Paavo, Szadkowska-Stanczyk, Irena, Persson, Bodil, Wild, Pascal, Kishi, Reiko, Lynge, Elsebeth, Henneberger, Paul, Sala, Maria, Teschke, Kay, Kauppinen, Timo, Colin, Didier, Kogevinas, Manolis, and Boffetta, Paolo
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CANCER-related mortality ,ORGANOCHLORINE compounds ,PULP mills ,PAPER industry ,PAPER industry workers ,POISSON'S equation ,REGRESSION analysis ,ENVIRONMENTAL health research ,MATHEMATICAL statistics - Abstract
The objective of this study was to evaluate cancer mortality in pulp and paper industry workers exposed to chlorinated organic compounds. We assembled a multinational cohort of workers employed between 1920 and 1996 in 11 countries. Exposure to both volatile and nonvolatile organochlorine compounds was estimated at the department level using an exposure matrix. We conducted a standardized mortality ratio (SMR) analysis based on age and calendar-period-specific national mortality rates and a Poisson regression analysis. The study population consisted of 60,468 workers. Workers exposed to volatile organochlorines experienced a deficit of all-cause [SMR = 0.91; 95% confidence interval (CI), 0.89–0.93] and all-cancer (SMR = 0.93; 95% CI, 0.89–0.97) mortality, with no evidence of increased risks for any cancer of a priori interest. There was a weak, but statistically significant, trend of increasing risk of all-cancer mortality with increasing weighted cumulative exposure. A similar deficit in all-cause (SMR = 0.94; 95% CI, 0.91–0.96) and all-cancer (SMR = 0.94; 95% CI, 0.89–1.00) mortality was observed in those exposed to nonvolatile organochlorines. No excess risk was observed in cancers of a priori interest, although mortality from Hodgkin disease was elevated (SMR = 1.76; 95% CI, 1.02–2.82). In this study we found little evidence that exposure to organochlorines at the levels experienced in the pulp and paper industry is associated with an increased risk of cancer, apart from a weak but significant association between all-cancer mortality and weighted cumulative volatile organochlorine exposure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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4. Pre-diagnostic serum concentrations of organochlorines and risk of acute myeloid leukemia: A nested case-control study in the Norwegian Janus Serum Bank Cohort.
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Bassig, Bryan A., Engel, Lawrence S., Langseth, Hilde, Grimsrud, Tom K., Cantor, Kenneth P., Vermeulen, Roel, Purdue, Mark P., Barr, Dana Boyd, Wong, Jason Y.Y., Blair, Aaron, Rothman, Nathaniel, and Lan, Qing
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LEUKEMIA risk factors , *ORGANOCHLORINE compounds , *ORGANOCHLORINE pesticides , *POLYCHLORINATED biphenyls , *ACUTE myeloid leukemia , *CHLORDAN , *HEPTACHLOR - Abstract
Abstract Background Epidemiologic studies suggest an increased risk of leukemia among individuals occupationally exposed to some organochlorine (OC) compounds. Associations between serum OC pesticide and polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) levels and risk of acute myeloid leukemia (AML), the most common subtype of acute leukemia in adult populations, have not been evaluated prospectively in the general population. Objective We evaluated the risk of AML in relation to pre-diagnostic serum levels of OC pesticides and PCBs in a case-control study nested within the Janus Serum Bank Cohort. Methods Janus is a large population-based cohort containing biologic samples collected beginning in the early 1970s from ~318,000 individuals in Norway. Serum levels of 11 OC pesticides or their metabolites and 34 PCB congeners were measured in 56 AML cases and 288 controls. Conditional logistic regression was conducted to evaluate associations between lipid-adjusted serum OC levels and risk of AML. Results Higher serum levels of total chlordane/heptachlor metabolites were associated with AML risk (3rd vs. 1st tertile odds ratio (OR) = 2.26, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 0.91–5.63; p trend = 0.11). Significant exposure-response associations were observed for levels of heptachlor epoxide (3rd vs. 1st tertile OR = 2.85, 95% CI = 1.05–7.73; p trend = 0.02) and dieldrin (3rd vs. 1st tertile OR = 2.71, 95% CI = 1.07–6.83; p trend = 0.03). No significant exposure-response associations with AML risk were observed for total DDT or individual isomers and derivatives. Higher serum levels of p,p′-DDT showed a non-significant increase in risk, but the exposure-response became attenuated when co-adjusting for heptachlor epoxide or dieldrin levels. Serum PCB levels were not significantly associated with AML risk. Conclusions Our data suggest that higher serum levels of dieldrin and metabolites derived from chlordane/heptachlor are associated with risk of AML in the general Norwegian population, based on samples collected on average ~17 years before diagnosis. Further research in populations with historically high or recent exposure to DDT is warranted to assess the association with AML risk with body burden of specific DDT isomers and derivatives. Highlights • Organochlorines are a diverse group of environmentally persistent chemicals with varying degrees of carcinogenicity. • First population-based study of pre-diagnostic serum organochlorine levels and acute myeloid leukemia (AML) risk. • Higher serum levels of heptachlor epoxide, oxychlordane, and dieldrin were associated with increased AML risk. • Higher serum levels of total DDT and p,p′-DDE were not significantly associated with AML risk. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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