Posted By Adrian Watson
Please note that I spotted a couple of errors as soon as I submitted my response. My appologies, the corrected version is as follows:
Dear All,
There is no doubt that many workers in the construction industry were exposed to heavy exposures in the 1960’s and 1970’s. I have spoken to many carpenters and electricians who recall being present or cutting sheets of asbestos insulation board using circular saws into strips 150 mm (6 in wide) for up stands or into smaller sheets for fire breaks. I have also spoken to plumbers who recall mixing asbestos insulation in buckets and having asbestos fights with the insulation. What is often forgotten is that many of these workers would have done this work as apprentices and would have been exposed as 15 and 16 year olds as apprentices. These exposures would have been very high and would have resulted in these workers having a significant risk of suffering asbestos related disease later in life.
From the available information the age profile appears to be getting older, i.e. there is a reduced risk for younger age groups. With respect to Tony’s sample of 10 persons it is too small to be meaningful. Furthermore the single fibre theory was discarded long ago as it was based upon a theory of carcinogenesis prevalent in the 1950’s. It is now accepted that there are many stages in the development of cancer and that normal homeostatic processes within body can cope with some of these stages. Thus whilst the likelihood of that event occurring increases with exposure levels, it is probable that there is a threshold for every individual within which the risk of disease is zero, but above which there risk increases. This would also explain to a moderate degree why high but brief episodes of exposure are more important than lower exposures over a longer period for the same substance. With different substances the half-life, toxicological, physical, chemical factors need be taken into account as well as the life style and patho-physiological processes within the individual.
The problem I have with from the abstract from the HSE statistics 2000/2001 is that it does not reconcile with the available evidence, including that from the HSE itself. In their review of fibre toxicity (HSE 1996 EH 65/30) it states:-
“There appears to be an association between pulmonary fibrosis and lung cancer in that both diseases show a similar dose-response relationships with respect to asbestos exposure, show similar doses, show similar latent periods for development, show a similar dependence on fibre type and size, and both diseases emanate from the same underlying chronic inflammatory conditions. These observations suggest that asbestos induced cancer, like fibrosis, is a threshold phenomenon. It can be concluded that exposures which are insufficient to elicit chronic inflammation/cell proliferation will not incur any increased risk of lung cancer.”
It also states...
“ The Doll and Peto (1985) risk assessment for chrysotile induced lung cancer was based on a linear no-threshold model applied to the mortality data from chrysotile textile manufacture. However the balance of toxicological evidence does not support the no-threshold model for asbestos induced lung cancer.”
Finally, it states...
“ Evidence from human studies suggests that amphibole asbestos may lead to the development mesothelioma at lower levels of cumulative exposure than would be required to cause lung cancer.”
This evidence, does not reconcile with their view as stated in paragraph
“2.91 There is evidence to suggest that these figures substantially underestimate the true extent of the disease. In heavily exposed populations there have typically been at least as many, sometimes up to five times as many, excess lung cancers as there have been mesotheliomas. The ratio depends on a range of factors (the most important of which are type of asbestos, level of exposure, age at exposure and smoking), so one cannot be too precise about the overall ratio. A reasonable rule of thumb would be to allow for one or two extra lung cancers for each mesothelioma. Going forward in time the ratio is likely to fall, because the mesotheliomas will increasingly be generated by low exposure levels (meaning fewer lung cancers per mesothelioma) and because
smoking levels have fallen since the 1960s.”
If you also take into account the recent estimates which suggest that a smoker who is exposed to asbestos is around 1.1-2.8 times at greater risk of lung cancer than if he smoked or was exposed to asbestos alone (Berry et al 1985), this would suggest that with 171 asbestosis deaths in 1999, the number of asbestos deaths attributable to smoking and asbestos related lung cancer is around about 200-400. This estimate is from about one quarter to one eighth of the number of recorded mesothelioma deaths, 1595 in 1999 and 10 times the number of asbestos related lung cancers, 42 (HSE 2001). Sword estimates the number of lung cancer deaths to be 81 in 1999 (HSE 2001). Whilst we all accept that there is some underreporting, I do not credit any scientific accuracy to my estimated figure of 200-400 lung cancer deaths, but I suggest that it has slightly more credibility than HSE’s estimates of 1700-3400 lung cancer deaths.
Whilst I will forgive the implied suggestion that some of us uncritically accept the views of the asbestos industry because we do not accept unreservedly HSE’s views, it should not be forgotten that HSE is not a neutral observer. They have vested interests in the proposed regulations, including those of receiving increased resources from government and increased income streams from laboratories, through the rice and aims schemes, to receiving a greater political profile. It should also be noted that persons working within the consulting and laboratory sectors and UKAS as well as HSE man the HSE’s advisory working parties. Now whilst I do not doubt the personal integrity of those within the working parties, I also do not doubt that the HSC is not getting unbiased opinion through the HSE.
For the record I do not work in the asbestos industry, but I am a consulting Health, Safety and Environmental Health Practitioner in the consulting sector.
Many Regards
Adrian Watson LLM MSc Dip Occ Hyg FBIOH ROH FIOSH RSP MCIEH