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Longitudinal pulmonary function in newly hired, non-World Trade Center-exposed fire department City of New York firefighters: the first 5 years.

Authors :
Aldrich TK
Ye F
Hall CB
Webber MP
Cohen HW
Dinkels M
Cosenza K
Weiden MD
Nolan A
Christodoulou V
Kelly KJ
Prezant DJ
Source :
Chest [Chest] 2013 Mar; Vol. 143 (3), pp. 791-797.
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

Background: Few longitudinal studies characterize firefighters’ pulmonary function. We sought to determine whether firefighters have excessive FEV(1) decline rates compared with control subjects.<br />Methods: We examined serial measurements of FEV(1) from about 6 months prehire to about 5 years posthire in newly hired male, never smoking, non-Hispanic black and white firefighters, hired between 2003 and 2006, without prior respiratory disease or World Trade Center exposure. Similarly defined Emergency Medical Service (EMS) workers served as control subjects.<br />Results: Through June 30, 2011, 940 firefighters (82%) and 97 EMS workers (72%) who met study criteria had four or more acceptable posthire spirometries. Prehire FEV(1) % averaged higher for firefighters than EMS workers (99% vs 95%), reflecting more stringent job entry criteria. FEV(1) (adjusted for baseline age and height) declined by an average of 45 mL/y both for firefighters and EMS workers, with Fire 2 EMS decline rate differences averaging 0.2 mL/y (CI, 2 9.2 to 9.6). Four percent of each group had FEV(1) less than the lower limit of normal before hire, increasing to 7% for firefighters and 17.5% for EMS workers, but similar percentages of both groups had adjusted FEV(1) decline rates 10%. Mixed effects modeling showed a significant influence of weight gain but not baseline weight: FEV(1) declined by about 8 mL/kg gained for both groups. Adjusting for weight change, FEV(1) decline averaged 38 mL/y for firefighters and 34 mL/y for EMS workers.<br />Conclusions: During the first 5 years of duty, firefighters do not show greater longitudinal FEV(1) decline than EMS control subjects, and fewer of them develop abnormal lung function. Weight gain is associated with a small loss of lung function, of questionable clinical relevance in this fit and active population.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1931-3543
Volume :
143
Issue :
3
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Chest
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
23188136
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1378/chest.12-0675