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Proven risk
Proven risks of cancer are situations in which an increased incidence of cancer has clearly been associated with exposure to a known carcinogen.
People smoking tobacco
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Situation
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People smoking tobacco
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Exposure
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Active smokers
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Carcinogen
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Tobacco smoke, being a mixture containing polycytic aromatic hydrocarbons and the nitrosated derivatives of nicotine and nor-nicotine.
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Principal route of exposure
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Inhalation
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Target organ (or tumour type)
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Lung, oral cavity, naso-oro & hypopharynx, nasal cavity & paranasal sinuses, larynx, stomach, esophagus, pancreas, liver, kidney, ureter, urinary bladder, uterine cervix & bone marrow
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Comment
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Major preventable cause of malignant disease
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People who previously smoked tobacco
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Situation
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People who previously smoked tobacco
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Exposure
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Ex-smokers
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Carcinogen
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Tobacco smoke, being a mixture containing polycytic aromatic hydrocarbons and the nitrosated derivatives of nicotine and nor-nicotine.
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Principal route of exposure
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Previous inhalation
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Target organ (or tumour type)
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Lung, oral cavity, naso-oro & hypopharynx, nasal cavity & paranasal sinuses, larynx, stomach, esophagus, pancreas, liver, kidney, ureter, urinary bladder, uterine cervix & bone marrow
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Comment
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Risk is reduced by comparison with continued smoking
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Using smokeless tobacco
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Situation
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Using smokeless tobacco
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Exposure
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Users of snuff, chewing tobacco and snus
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Carcinogen
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Tobacco-related nitrosamines
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Principal route of exposure
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Oral
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Target organ (or tumour type)
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Oral cavity, pancreas
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Comment
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Animal data establish role of nitrosamines
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Treatment with certain therapeutic drugs
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Situation
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Treatment with certain therapeutic drugs
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Exposure
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Patients receiving relevant drugs/treatments
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Carcinogen
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Phenacetin-containing analgesics
Diethylstilboestrol
Cyclophosphamide & other cytotoxic drugs (including combinations)
Combined estrogen-progestogen contraceptives
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Principal route of exposure
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Therapeutic administration
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Target organ (or tumour type)
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Target organ/tumor types specific for particular drug and include leukaemia and cancers of breast, liver, kidney and multiple other sites
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Comment
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Listed agents exemplify, but do not include all therapeutic drugs in the highest IARC/NTP category. Risk-benefit consideration are relevant; some drugs listed are used because of clear benefit despite a recognized hazard
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Drinking alcoholic beverages
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Situation
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Drinking alcoholic beverages
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Exposure
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Consumers of alcoholic beverages, and particularly those who smoke.
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Carcinogen
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Alcoholic beverages; (no class of drink is more markedly implicated than others)
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Principal route of exposure
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Oral
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Target organ (or tumour type)
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Oral cavity, esophagus, liver, breast
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Comment
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No particular category of beverage (beer, wine or spirits) is most strongly implicated.
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Occupational cancer attributable to specific agents
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Situation
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Occupational cancer attributable to specific agents
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Exposure
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Workers handling, or having contact with, particular chemicals or radiation
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Carcinogen
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Soot and tar
Benzo[a]pyrene
Asbestos
Vinyl chloride
Ionizing radiation Radon
Benzene
Cr VI , Ni, As & Cd compounds
TCDD
Formaldehyde
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Principal route of exposure
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Dermal, inhalation
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Target organ (or tumour type)
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Target organ depends on the agent: most commonly lung, urinary bladder and skin; all sites combined for TCDD
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Comment
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Agents listed are only a subset of known occupational carcinogens. Agents listed are implicated in a non-occupational environmental context addressed in Inferred risks.
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Deliberate exposure to sunlight
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Situation
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Deliberate exposure to sunlight
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Exposure
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White skinned populations
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Carcinogen
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Solar radiation; broad spectrum ultraviolet radiation
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Principal route of exposure
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Irradiation
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Target organ (or tumour type)
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Skin (cutaneous melanoma, squamous cell carcinoma, basal call carcinoma)
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Comment
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Account must also be taken of the beneficial effects of sunlight in relation to vitamin D.
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Particular work environments or job classifications
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Situation
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Particular work environments or job classifications
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Exposure
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Workers eg. work as a painter and work in the rubber industry; environments associated with aluminium production, coke production, furniture & cabinet making; iron & steel founding
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Carcinogen
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Some chemicals implicated (eg exposure to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons or aromatic amines) but causality not established because of complex exposures.
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Principal route of exposure
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Inhalation, and in some instances, dermal
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Target organ (or tumour type)
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Lung and other sites
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Comment
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By comparison with occupational cancers caused by particular agents, specific causative agents have not been identified in relation to the work environments listed.
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Residing near point sources of recognised carcinogens causing extreme local pollution
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Situation
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Residing near point sources of recognised carcinogens causing extreme local pollution
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Exposure
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Relevant local populations
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Carcinogen
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Asbestos
Coke oven and iron foundry emissions
Arsenic, cadmium and nickels compounds
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Principal route of exposure
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Inhalation in all cases
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Target organ (or tumour type)
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Lung and other sites depending on pollutant
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Comment
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Studies indicate increased cancer risk in local populations, though some studies fail to establish carcinogenic risk in this context.
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Passive smoking
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Situation
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Passive smoking
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Exposure
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Children & adults in smoker household; persons exposed as a consequence of smoking in the workplace and other environments
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Carcinogen
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Tobacco smoke passively inhaled
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Principal route of exposure
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Inhalation
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Target organ (or tumour type)
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Lung. Some evidence regarding larynx and other sites
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Comment
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Some inferences in relation to target organs apart from lung (eg. larynx)
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Drinking water contamination from industrial sources of arsenic
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Situation
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Drinking water contamination from industrial sources of arsenic
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Exposure
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Surrounding communities
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Carcinogen
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Arsenic compounds
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Principal route of exposure
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Ingestion
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Target organ (or tumour type)
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Urinary bladder & others
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Comment
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Many relevant studies do not established increased incidence of cancer despite clear evidence of relevant exposure.
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Residential exposure to radon
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Situation
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Residential exposure to radon
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Exposure
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Occupants of particular houses
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Carcinogen
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Radon
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Principal route of exposure
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Inhalation and irradiation (Yes: studies involving home exposure indicate causality)
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Target organ (or tumour type)
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Lung
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Comment
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Carcinogenic hazard established primarily by occupational studies but residential risk is specifically recognised.
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This information is based on peer review research published in the journal: B.W. Stewart, Banding carcinogenic risks in developed countries: A procedural basis for qualitative assessment, Mutat. Res.: Rev. Mutat. Res. (2008), doi:10.1016/j.mrrev.2007.11.007.
This page was last updated on : Monday, 22 March 2010
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