Occupational exposure to diesel engine exhaust and alterations in immune/inflammatory markers: a cross-sectional molecular epidemiology study in China

  • Bryan A. Bassig
  • , Yufei Dai
  • , Roel Vermeulen
  • , Dianzhi Ren
  • , Wei Hu
  • , Huawei Duan
  • , Yong Niu
  • , Jun Xu
  • , Meredith S Shiels
  • , Troy J Kemp
  • , Ligia A Pinto
  • , Wei Fu
  • , Kees Meliefste
  • , Baosen Zhou
  • , Jufang Yang
  • , Meng Ye
  • , Xiaowei Jia
  • , Tao Meng
  • , Jason Y Y Wong
  • , Ping Li
  • H. Dean Hosgood, Allan Hildesheim, Debra T. Silverman, Nathaniel Rothman, Yuxin Zheng, Qing Lan

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

    Abstract

    The relationship between diesel engine exhaust (DEE), a known lung carcinogen, and immune/inflammatory markers that have been prospectively associated with lung cancer risk is not well understood. To provide insight into these associations, we conducted a cross-sectional molecular epidemiology study of 54 males highly occupationally exposed to DEE and 55 unexposed male controls from representative workplaces in China. We measured plasma levels of 64 immune/inflammatory markers in all subjects using Luminex bead-based assays, and compared our findings to those from a nested case-control study of these markers and lung cancer risk, which had been conducted among never-smoking women in Shanghai using the same multiplex panels. Levels of nine markers that were associated with lung cancer risk in the Shanghai study were altered in DEE-exposed workers in the same direction as the lung cancer associations. Among these, associations with the levels of CRP (β= -0.53; P = 0.01) and CCL15/MIP-1D (β = 0.20; P = 0.02) were observed in workers exposed to DEE and with increasing elemental carbon exposure levels (Ptrends <0.05) in multivariable linear regression models. Levels of a third marker positively associated with an increased lung cancer risk, CCL2/MCP-1, were higher among DEE-exposed workers compared with controls in never and former smokers, but not in current smokers (Pinteraction = 0.01). The immunological differences in these markers in DEE-exposed workers are consistent with associations observed for lung cancer risk in a prospective study of Chinese women and may provide some insight into the mechanistic processes by which DEE causes lung cancer.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)1104-1111
    Number of pages8
    JournalCarcinogenesis
    Volume38
    Issue number11
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2017

    UN SDGs

    This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

    1. SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being
      SDG 3 Good Health and Well-being

    Keywords

    • Adult
    • Air Pollutants, Occupational
    • Biomarkers
    • Carcinogens
    • Case-Control Studies
    • China
    • Cross-Sectional Studies
    • Gasoline
    • Humans
    • Inflammation
    • Lung
    • Lung Neoplasms
    • Male
    • Molecular Epidemiology
    • Occupational Exposure
    • Prospective Studies
    • Risk Assessment
    • Vehicle Emissions

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