FORMALDEHYDE EXPOSURE AMONG INDUSTRIAL
WORKERS IS ASSOCIATED WITH INCREASED RISK OF CANCERS OF THE BLOOD AND LYMPHATIC
SYSTEM
Results from an ongoing study of workers employed at plants that used or
produced formaldehyde continue to show a possible link between formaldehyde
exposure and death from cancers of the blood and lymphatic system, particularly
myeloid leukemia. The report, by researchers at
the National Cancer Institute (NCI), part of the National
Institutes of Health, provides an additional 10 years of follow-up data
to build on previous findings from this study. The report appeared online
May 12, 2009, and in print May 20, 2009, in the Journal of the
National Cancer Institute.
"The overall patterns of risk seen in this extended follow-up of
industrial workers, while not definitive, are consistent with a causal
association between formaldehyde exposure and cancers of the blood and
lymphatic system and warrant continued concern. Further studies are
needed to evaluate risks of these cancers in other formaldehyde-exposed
populations and to assess possible biological mechanisms," said lead
author of the report, Laura E. Beane Freeman, Ph.D., NCI Division of Cancer
Epidemiology and Genetics.
Formaldehyde is widely used for industrial
purposes and as a preservative and disinfectant. The International Agency
for Research on Cancer classifies this chemical as a human carcinogen, based
primarily on its association with nasopharyngeal cancer. In 1995, the
U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration estimated that approximately
2.1 million workers in the United States
were exposed to formaldehyde.
Since the 1980s, NCI has studied cancer deaths among a group of 25,619 workers,
predominately white males, who were employed before 1966 in 10 industrial
plants that produced formaldehyde and formaldehyde resin and that used the
chemical to produce molded-plastic products, decorative
laminates, photographic film, or plywood.
In a previous report from this study, which included data on cancer deaths
through 1994, researchers showed that the risk of death from leukemias (myeloid
leukemia in particular) increased with higher levels of formaldehyde exposure.
In this report, which includes an average follow-up of over 40 years,
researchers found a statistically significant association between death from
all blood and lymphatic cancers combined and peak formaldehyde exposure.
Workers with the highest peak exposures had a 37 percent increased risk of
death compared to those with the lowest level of peak exposures. This
represents an excess risk of death from several
specific cancers, including Hodgkin's lymphoma, multiple myeloma, and myeloid leukemia -- the type most
often associated with chemical exposure.
In this study, the risk of death from myeloid leukemia was 78 percent higher
among industrial workers with the highest peak exposures compared to those with
the lowest peak exposures. Excess risks of death from myeloid leukemia
have also been reported among pathologists, embalmers, and other professionals
who experience high-intensity peak exposures to formaldehyde. The highest
level of increased risk of death from myeloid leukemia in this study occurred
early on and has been declining steadily over time. This pattern could be due
to chance, but the investigators note that similar patterns of risks over time
have been seen for agents that are known to cause leukemia
relatively soon after exposure.
"We know that various groups of professionals who may experience high peak
exposures to formaldehyde are at increased risk of leukemia, but the evidence
from studies of industrial workers, among whom exposure levels and patterns may
be more variable, has been conflicting. The fact that we see an excess in this
study of industrial workers, which is both the largest and the one with the
most extensive exposure assessment, is notable,"
said Beane Freeman.
Based on the available data, scientists have not been able to identify a
mechanism for how normal white blood cells might
become leukemic following exposure to formaldehyde, because there is no direct
evidence that formaldehyde damages cells in the bone marrow. However, studies
of humans exposed to inhaled formaldehyde have shown higher rates of damage to
their chromosomes in a type of mature white blood cells compared with rates in
individuals who were not exposed to formaldehyde. Although the relevance to the
development of leukemia of such chromosomal damage to mature white blood cells
is not clear, agents that cause leukemia are also known to be associated with
chromosomal aberrations in the peripheral blood cells
of humans.
This study is also the first to report a statistically significant association
between a chemical exposure and increased risk of death from Hodgkin lymphoma. Although based on a small number of
deaths, the finding may warrant further study.