Publikation: Konferencebidrag › Konferenceabstrakt til konference › Forskning
Publikation: Konferencebidrag › Konferenceabstrakt til konference › Forskning
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TY - ABST
T1 - Nitrate in drinking water and colorectal cancer - a nationwide population-based follow-up study
AU - Schullehner, Jörg
AU - Hansen, Birgitte
AU - Pedersen, Carsten Bøcker
AU - Sigsgaard, Torben
PY - 2016/8/16
Y1 - 2016/8/16
N2 - Importance of work and objectivesStudies have suggested that nitrate in drinking water increased the risk of colorectal cancer. However, often exposure estimations and study size were insufficient to yield unequivocal results. We addressed these challenges by conducting a detailed exposure assessment of the entire Danish population.MethodologiesGIS methods were used to assign nitrate concentrations at the waterworks to the 2,779 water supply areas and 55,752 private wells. Annual nitrate concentrations were assigned to each resident of Denmark from 1978-2012, based on their exact address in the Civil Registration System. For each person the individual adult exposure (age 20-35) was calculated. Information on colon and rectal cancer diagnoses was obtained from the national Cancer Registry. Cox proportional hazard models using age as time scale were fit to assess the risk within exposure deciles. Possible confounding co-variates, such as sex, education, region and previous cancer diagnoses were included and sensitivity analyses conducted taking the uncertainty of the exposure estimate into account.Main results2,833,825 individuals were enrolled, totaling a follow-up time of approx. 32 million person-years. Preliminary results will be presented, indicating an increased risk for colon cancer at concentrations far below the drinking water standard (50 mg/l). Results for rectal cancer did not show the same consistent pattern.ConclusionsThis nationwide population-based study addresses previous studies’ challenges of poor exposure assessment and insufficient study population sizes. It adds to the increasing body of evidence of negative chronic health effects associated with increased levels of nitrate in drinking water.
AB - Importance of work and objectivesStudies have suggested that nitrate in drinking water increased the risk of colorectal cancer. However, often exposure estimations and study size were insufficient to yield unequivocal results. We addressed these challenges by conducting a detailed exposure assessment of the entire Danish population.MethodologiesGIS methods were used to assign nitrate concentrations at the waterworks to the 2,779 water supply areas and 55,752 private wells. Annual nitrate concentrations were assigned to each resident of Denmark from 1978-2012, based on their exact address in the Civil Registration System. For each person the individual adult exposure (age 20-35) was calculated. Information on colon and rectal cancer diagnoses was obtained from the national Cancer Registry. Cox proportional hazard models using age as time scale were fit to assess the risk within exposure deciles. Possible confounding co-variates, such as sex, education, region and previous cancer diagnoses were included and sensitivity analyses conducted taking the uncertainty of the exposure estimate into account.Main results2,833,825 individuals were enrolled, totaling a follow-up time of approx. 32 million person-years. Preliminary results will be presented, indicating an increased risk for colon cancer at concentrations far below the drinking water standard (50 mg/l). Results for rectal cancer did not show the same consistent pattern.ConclusionsThis nationwide population-based study addresses previous studies’ challenges of poor exposure assessment and insufficient study population sizes. It adds to the increasing body of evidence of negative chronic health effects associated with increased levels of nitrate in drinking water.
M3 - Conference abstract for conference
T2 - The 3rd International Symposium on Environment and Health
Y2 - 14 August 2016 through 20 August 2016
ER -