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

Situation
People smoking tobacco
Exposure
Active smokers
Carcinogen
Tobacco smoke, being a mixture containing polycytic aromatic hydrocarbons and the nitrosated derivatives of nicotine and nor-nicotine.
Principal route of exposure
Inhalation
Target organ (or tumour type)
Lung, oral cavity, naso-oro & hypopharynx, nasal cavity & paranasal sinuses, larynx, stomach, esophagus, pancreas, liver, kidney, ureter, urinary bladder, uterine cervix & bone marrow
Comment
Major preventable cause of malignant disease

People who previously smoked tobacco

Situation
People who previously smoked tobacco
Exposure
Ex-smokers
Carcinogen
Tobacco smoke, being a mixture containing polycytic aromatic hydrocarbons and the nitrosated derivatives of nicotine and nor-nicotine.
Principal route of exposure
Previous inhalation
Target organ (or tumour type)
Lung, oral cavity, naso-oro & hypopharynx, nasal cavity & paranasal sinuses, larynx, stomach, esophagus, pancreas, liver, kidney, ureter, urinary bladder, uterine cervix & bone marrow
Comment
Risk is reduced by comparison with continued smoking

Using smokeless tobacco

Situation
Using smokeless tobacco
Exposure
Users of snuff, chewing tobacco and snus
Carcinogen
Tobacco-related nitrosamines
Principal route of exposure
Oral
Target organ (or tumour type)
Oral cavity, pancreas
Comment
Animal data establish role of nitrosamines

Treatment with certain therapeutic drugs

Situation
Treatment with certain therapeutic drugs
Exposure
Patients receiving relevant drugs/treatments
Carcinogen
Phenacetin-containing analgesics
Diethylstilboestrol
Cyclophosphamide & other cytotoxic drugs (including combinations)
Combined estrogen-progestogen contraceptives
Principal route of exposure
Therapeutic administration
Target organ (or tumour type)
Target organ/tumor types specific for particular drug and include leukaemia and cancers of breast, liver, kidney and multiple other sites
Comment
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

Drinking alcoholic beverages

Situation
Drinking alcoholic beverages
Exposure
Consumers of alcoholic beverages, and particularly those who smoke.
Carcinogen
Alcoholic beverages; (no class of drink is more markedly implicated than others)
Principal route of exposure
Oral
Target organ (or tumour type)
Oral cavity, esophagus, liver, breast
 
Comment
No particular category of beverage (beer, wine or spirits) is most strongly implicated.

Occupational cancer attributable to specific agents

Situation
Occupational cancer attributable to specific agents
Exposure
Workers handling, or having contact with, particular chemicals or radiation
Carcinogen
Soot and tar
Benzo[a]pyrene
Asbestos
Vinyl chloride
Ionizing radiation Radon
Benzene
Cr VI , Ni, As & Cd compounds
TCDD
Formaldehyde
Principal route of exposure
Dermal, inhalation
 
Target organ (or tumour type)
Target organ depends on the agent: most commonly lung, urinary bladder and skin; all sites combined for TCDD
Comment
Agents listed are only a subset of known occupational carcinogens. Agents listed are implicated in a non-occupational environmental context addressed in Inferred risks.

Deliberate exposure to sunlight

Situation
Deliberate exposure to sunlight
Exposure
White skinned populations
Carcinogen
Solar radiation; broad spectrum ultraviolet radiation
Principal route of exposure
Irradiation
Target organ (or tumour type)
Skin (cutaneous melanoma, squamous cell carcinoma, basal call carcinoma)
Comment
Account must also be taken of the beneficial effects of sunlight in relation to vitamin D.

Particular work environments or job classifications

Situation
Particular work environments or job classifications 
Exposure
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
Carcinogen
Some chemicals implicated (eg exposure to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons or aromatic amines) but causality not established because of complex exposures.
Principal route of exposure
Inhalation, and in some instances, dermal
Target organ (or tumour type)
Lung and other sites
 
Comment
By comparison with occupational cancers caused by particular agents, specific causative agents have not been identified in relation to the work environments listed.

Residing near point sources of recognised carcinogens causing extreme local pollution

Situation
Residing near point sources of recognised carcinogens causing extreme local pollution
Exposure
Relevant local populations
Carcinogen
Asbestos
Coke oven and iron foundry emissions
Arsenic, cadmium and nickels compounds
Principal route of exposure
Inhalation in all cases
 
Target organ (or tumour type)
Lung and other sites depending on pollutant
 
Comment
Studies indicate increased cancer risk in local populations, though some studies fail to establish carcinogenic risk in this context.

Passive smoking

Situation
Passive smoking
Exposure
Children & adults in smoker household; persons exposed as a consequence of smoking in the workplace and other environments
Carcinogen
Tobacco smoke passively inhaled
Principal route of exposure
Inhalation
Target organ (or tumour type)
Lung. Some evidence regarding larynx and other sites
 
Comment
Some inferences in relation to target organs apart from lung (eg. larynx)

Drinking water contamination from industrial sources of arsenic

Situation
Drinking water contamination from industrial sources of arsenic
Exposure
Surrounding communities
Carcinogen
Arsenic compounds
Principal route of exposure
Ingestion
Target organ (or tumour type)
Urinary bladder & others
 
Comment
Many relevant studies do not established increased incidence of cancer despite clear evidence of relevant exposure.

Residential exposure to radon

Situation
Residential exposure to radon
Exposure
Occupants of particular houses
Carcinogen
Radon
Principal route of exposure
Inhalation and irradiation (Yes: studies involving home exposure indicate causality)
Target organ (or tumour type)
Lung
 
Comment
Carcinogenic hazard established primarily by occupational studies but residential risk is specifically recognised.

 

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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