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A
Risk Assessment for Exposure to
Grunerite Asbestos (amosite)
Nolan RP, Langer AM, Wilson R.;
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1999 Mar 30.
ARTICLE ABSTRACT
The potential for health risks to humans exposed to the
asbestos minerals continues to be a public health concern.
Although the production and use of the commercial amphibole
asbestos minerals—grunerite (amosite) and riebeckite (crocidolite)—have
been almost completely eliminated from world commerce, special
opportunities for potentially significant exposures remain.
Commercially viable deposits of grunerite asbestos are very
rare, but it can occur as a gangue mineral in a limited part
of a mine otherwise thought asbestos-free. This report
describes such a situation, in which a very localized seam of
grunerite asbestos was identified in an iron ore mine. The
geological occurrence of the seam in the ore body is
described, as well as the mineralogical character of the
grunerite asbestos. The most relevant epidemiological studies
of workers exposed to grunerite asbestos are used to gauge the
hazards associated with the inhalation of this fibrous
mineral. Both analytical transmission electron microscopy and
phase-contrast optical microscopy were used to quantify the
fibers present in the air during mining in the area with
outcroppings of grunerite asbestos. Analytical transmission
electron microscopy and continuous-scan x-ray diffraction were
used to determine the type of asbestos fiber present. Knowing
the level of the miner's exposures, we carried out a risk
assessment by using a model developed for the Environmental
Protection Agency.
INTRODUCTION
We evaluate the potential for any risk to health in miners
that might arise after the release of grunerite asbestos from
a seam in an iron ore mine. None of the analytical criteria
required for the mineral's identification were ambiguous (the
objects studied were asbestos fibers, not cleavage fragments).
A geological survey of the asbestos seam indicated
localization in a relatively small area of the mine. No
asbestos of any other variety was detected in the blast
pattern and drill core samples. To evaluate the potential for
asbestos exposure, an air sampling program that included area
and personal samples was initiated. Both types of samples were
analyzed by phase-contrast optical microscopy and analytical
transmission electron microscopy (ATEM). The risk assessment
calculations were referenced to the fibers ≥5 μm
long, with fiber counts obtained by phase-contrast optical
microscopy using standard National Institute of Occupational
Safety and Health–Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA)
methods.
The grunerite asbestos identified in the iron ore mine is a
known human carcinogen and merits special attention, although
its presence in the mine appears to be an anomaly. The best
evidence for the pathogenicity of grunerite asbestos has come
from epidemiological studies of workers in factories where
predominantly this fiber type was used. The mortality studies
of lung cancer, mesothelioma, and asbestosis among grunerite
asbestos exposed workers are reviewed.
In addition, lung content analysis using ATEM was used to
characterize the fiber concentrations found in lung tissues of
individuals who developed asbestos-related diseases after
exposure. The results of the air sampling program are used to
calculate the mine work required to inhale a similar number of
fibers as that found in the lungs of mesothelioma cases.
The exposures measured in the iron ore mine are several
factors of ten lower than the occupational exposures that
occurred in the studied groups. Unlike the comparisons of lung
content described above that assumes a threshold, the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) model assumes a linear
dose-response, where each exposure is associated with an
incremental increase in risk.
Brief Review of the Occupational Health Effects
Associated with Asbestos Exposure.
The earliest reports on the health effects of exposure to
asbestos occurred among individuals who were exposed
predominately to chrysotile asbestos (1). The first case in
the English literature of asbestos-related pulmonary fibrosis
described as asbestosis was reported in 1927 and occurred in a
chrysotile textile worker. Although the first medical
indications of any effect of asbestos on health was reported
in 1906 in France and the United Kingdom, it (as with other
diseases, like silicosis) was frequently complicated by the
presence of tuberculosis. However, by 1938, asbestosis was
generally accepted by industry and government health units as
an occupational disease with distinct clinical, radiological,
lung function, and pathological characteristics.
Case reports of lung cancer accompanying asbestosis first
began to appear in the literature during the 1930s. The
evidence associating these diseases was greatly strengthened
by the information Merewether provided for the 1947 Report of
the Chief Inspector of Factories (England). He reviewed the
accumulated data from 1923–1946 and found a 13.2% prevalence
of lung cancer among the 235 autopsies of individuals know to
have died with asbestosis, compared with 1.3% in 6,884 cases
of silicosis. A high prevalence of lung cancer was found among
other autopsy series of asbestosis cases, such as Wyer (1949),
where 14.8% lung cancer was found among 115 asbestosis deaths
(1), although at a meeting in Zagreb in 1953, Merewether (2)
expressed doubt about the relationship between asbestosis and
cancer of the lung, perhaps because of the limitations of an
autopsy series.
In 1955, Sir Richard Doll published a comprehensive
epidemiological survey of employees of chrysotile asbestos
textile plant in Rochdale, England (3). Individuals employed
for 20 or more years experienced lung cancer ≈14 times
more frequently than the general population (11 cases
observed/0.8 expected). The results became available at the
same time that the association between lung cancer and
cigarette smoking was being established. Defining the increase
in the risk of developing lung cancer when an individual's
exposure to chrysotile asbestos is insufficient to produce
asbestosis is mostly theoretical. Changes in the diagnostic
criteria of asbestosis have further complicated the matter.
In 1960, Wagner et al. (4) reported 33 cases of a malignant
tumor known as mesothelioma, which he attributed to
crocidolite exposure. The discovery focused attention on the
question of asbestos fiber type and disease. This rare tumor
was the last of the three major asbestos-related diseases to
be identified. The potency of chrysotile to induce this tumor
in humans remains a subject of considerable controversy. It
also is clear that exposure to crocidolite asbestos,
actinolite-tremolite asbestos, and grunerite asbestos produce
considerably higher incidence of this disease, sometimes even
after exposures that are considered quite low. The patterns of
mesothelioma depending on asbestos fiber type are strikingly
different in that a high mortality for mesothelioma is never
found among individuals exposed only to chrysotile asbestos
(5), although from time to time, individuals present with
pleural mesothelioma and high concentrations of chrysotile are
found to be present in the pulmonary tissue by lung content
analysis (6).
Geological Survey of the Area of the Mine Containing
Grunerite Asbestos.
The grunerite asbestos is confined to quartz–ankerite–grunerite
veins of the host rock. These veins contain medium- to
coarse-grained quartz, ankerite, stilpnomelane, and grunerite
fiber distributed throughout a specific bench face (Fig. 1).
The veins range up to 3 feet thick. The major veins occur
within a magnetite–chert–silicate unit at the contact of
the host rock and metadiabase sill units. The larger veins
generally conform to the compositional banding of the host
rock, but smaller veins commonly cut across the structure.
Long-fibered asbestos mineral development is restricted to the
thicker conformable veins.
Grunerite asbestos is developed within the quartz–ankerite–stilpnomelane
veins and along its contact with the host rock and sills. The
veins were deformed structurally, exhibiting signs of
shearing, brecciation, faulting, and folding. Minor
quartz–carbonate veins occur, which lack asbestos-like
minerals.
The grunerite asbestos is discontinuous along the strike of
the veins. Locally, recrystallization or replacement within
the host rock has resulted in relatively coarse-grained
acicular amphibole. The coarse-grained amphiboles are most
notable in the silicate layers, but occur occasionally within
the magnetite–chert bands, particularly near grunerite
asbestos. Fibrous amphiboles occur irregularly in
cross-cutting and concordant vein-like structures over a
gradational zone from the host wall rock, with fairly coarser
grained amphiboles, to quartz-ankerite–stilpnomelane–grunerite
veins. The coarse grunerite asbestos occurs discretely within,
and immediately adjacent to, the quartz–ankerite–stilpnomelane
veins (Fig. 2). Strongly sheared horizons in the host rock
close to the veins have formed platy, bladed, and fibrous
mineral habits, only some of which are asbestiform. At several
places along the strike of the quartz–ankerite–stilpnomelane–grunerite
veins, the host rock has been tightly folded immediately
adjacent to the vein (several inches on both sides).
Essentially no deformation is observed just inches away from
tight folding.
Banded, vuggy, quartz–fluorite–pyrite–chalcopyrite veins
occur locally (most notably at the extreme southern end of the
mapped bench) possibly in association with the quartz–ankerite–stilpnomelane–grunerite
veins. The mineralogy and appearance of the sulfide veins
indicate a different generation of development, but no clear
cross-cutting relationships were observed. Minor
quartz–magnetite–pyrite–chalcopyrite veins and veinlets
occur.
Analysis of Bulk Samples.
Three bulk samples, selected from highly fibrous
seams, were analyzed by polarized light microscopy,
continuous-scan x-ray diffraction, and ATEM. In the United
States, MSHA and the Occupational Safety and Health
Administration (OSHA) regulate six minerals under the asbestos
standard (Table 1). Five are amphiboles. These minerals have
diverse elemental compositions (7). Each of the named minerals
can exist in three different morphological forms or habits (8)
that have been shown to effect their biological potential (9).
In the asbestos habit, the fiber occurs as parallel fibrils,
which form polyfilamentous bundles. It is this habit that is
believed to cause cancer, and only this asbestos habit is
regulated by MSHA and OSHA. The two other habits are
nonasbestiform, occurring as splintery fiber, and massive
anhedral nodules. When crushed, however, the nonasbestiform
amphiboles may form elongated cleavage fragments that
morphologically resemble fibers. Difficulties arise when
cleavage fragments occur in association with amphibole
asbestos.
Two of the asbestos minerals (cummigtonite–grunerite and
tremolite–actinolite) form a solid solution series in which
Fe2+ and Mg2+ substitute. Although actinolite, grunerite, and
tremolite do occur in nature as asbestos minerals, an
occurrence of cummingtonite asbestos has not been reported.
All three of the highly fibrous samples were analyzed by
polarized light microscopy, continuous-scan x-ray diffraction,
and ATEM. None of the analytical criteria required for the
mineral's identification are ambiguous (10). The asbestos seam
is localized to a relatively small area of the mine. No other
asbestos fiber type was detected in 24 blast pattern and drill
core samples collected to evaluate the depth to which the seam
extends.
Evaluation of Air Samples from the Mine.
To evaluate the potential for asbestos exposure by
inhalation, an air sampling program (including both area and
personal samples) was initiated. The personal samples were job
classification-specific and sufficient in number to evaluate
the range of exposures that would occur during mining of the
ore. Of the 179 personal air samples collected, the mean
concentration was 0.05 fiber per ml (all fiber ≥5 μm),
and the highest exposure was 0.39 fiber per ml (all fiber
≥5 μm) (Table 2). None exceeded the MSHA asbestos
standard (2 fiber per ml) (all fiber ≥5 μm) or
action level, although 13.4% did exceed the current OSHA
asbestos standard of 0.1 fiber per ml (all fiber ≥5
μm) (Table 3).
Comparison of Epidemiological Studies of Workers Exposed
to Iron Ore Dust and Those Exposed to Asbestos Dust.
The four epidemiological studies described cover
mortality. Such studies of causes of death,are used to
determine whether a cohort (a group of individuals defined by
exposure to some agent) dies more frequently from a particular
disease than would otherwise be expected (based on rates in
the reference population, e.g., everyone in the U.S.A.).
Diseases such as lung cancer occur with a natural background.
Cigarette smoking elevates the expected background death rate,
and cancer incidence may be further increased by exposure to
certain environmental agents. The assumption is made that the
fraction of people that smoke is the same in the exposed as
the control group. Epidemiological cohort studies allow for
the determination of association between exposure to some
agent and an increase in the occurrence of a specific disease.
The standardized mortality ratio (SMR) is the number of deaths
observed of a specific disease in the cohort divided by the
number of deaths from that cause expected for the reference
population, multiplied by 100. As the years of exposure
increases, the SMR should also rise because of the increase in
dose.
A cohort of 17,800 asbestos insulation workers in the United
States and Canada was followed from January 1, 1967 until the
end of 1986 (11, 12). At the end of 1986, after almost 302,000
person-years of observation, 4,951 deaths occurred, while only
3,453 deaths were expected. The increased incidence of lung
cancer accounted for >50% of the excess deaths (Table 4).
The SMR (100 × observed/expected cases) for lung cancer was
435, whereas 8.6% and 9.3% of the deaths were caused by
asbestosis and mesothelioma, respectively. Although the
insulators were exposed to all of the commercial asbestos
fiber types, the major fiber type retained in the worker's
lung tissue was grunerite asbestos (12).
Vermiculite Ore Containing Tremolite Asbestos.
The mineral vermiculite has the generalized chemical
formula (Mg, Ca)0.35(Mg, Fe, Al)3(Al, Si)4O10(OH)2nH2O. On
heating, the mineral loses water rapidly and expands to form a
lightweight aggregate used for various purposes, e.g.,
insulation, soil conditioning, and filter medium. Various
amphibole minerals associated with vermiculite have been the
focus of health concerns, rather than vermiculite itself.
The health effects among the miners and millers in Libby,
Montana exposed to vermiculite containing tremolite asbestos
have been studied by two groups of investigators (13–17).
Each investigation was designed as a mortality study and a
cross-sectional chest radiographic survey. Slightly different
criteria were used to define each cohort: the McDonald study
(13, 14) contained 406 men with 165 deaths, and the Amandus
study (15–17) contained 575 men with 161 deaths. Both
research groups used historical air samples to estimate
exposure indices for the cohort members. The dust levels in
the past were made with a device called a midget impinger, and
the unit of concentration of dust was expressed in millions of
particles per cubic foot (mppcf) of air. Conversion factors
have been used to change the mppcf unit to an approximate
number of fibers per milliliter of air (fibers per ml ≥5
μm), the units used in modern risk assessment (13, 15,
18).
The exposure in the mill before the installation of dust
control equipment in 1964, was estimated to be 400 and 168
fibers per ml (all fiber ≥5 μm), respectively. Dust
levels between 1965 and the closure of the mill in 1974 were
estimated by McDonald et al. and Amandus et al. to ≈20
and ≈33 fibers per ml (all fiber ≥5 μm),
respectively. These were the highest exposures measured except
for 20% higher dust levels during floor sweeping.
McDonald and colleagues calculated the SMR for total mortality
as 117, with 23 lung cancers observed against 9.4 expected (SMR
= 245) and 4 mesotheliomas (2.4%). The SMR for the total
mortality in the Amandus cohort was 110, with 20 lung cancers
where ≈9 cases were expected (SMR = 223) and 2
mesotheliomas (1.2%). The lung cancer SMR for >20 years
since first exposure for all exposure levels were 242 and 279
for the McDonald and Amandus cohorts, respectively. Both
cohorts had an SMR of 250 for nonmalignant respiratory
disease.
Two Cohort of Minnesota Iron Ore Workers.
Taconite is a term used particularly in the Lake
Superior region of Minnesota for certain iron-containing rocks
from the Biwabik Iron Formation. A high-grade ore concentrate
is obtained from commercial-grade taconite that contains
enough magnetite (Fe3O4) to be economically processed by fine
grinding and wet-magnetic separation. Taconite is a hard,
dense, fine-grained metamorphic rock that contains substantial
quartz (20–50%) and magnetite (10–36%) and various mineral
constituents, including hematite, carbonates, amphiboles
(principally of the cummingtonite–grunerite series, although
actinolite and hornblende also occur), greenalite, chamosite,
minnesotaite, and stilpnomelane.
Reserve Mining Company.
Analysis of mortality data obtained on men who were
employed from 1952–1976 has been reported (19). The study
was initiated by concerns in the early 1970s that asbestos was
released into the air and dumped into lake water during
processing of the taconite rock (20, 21). It was inferred that
this dust posed a risk to the miners as well as to the general
public. Silver Bay and Duluth obtained their drinking water
from Lake Superior, into which the pulverized waste rock (or
tailings) from the pellet plant was deposited at Silver Bay.
The U.S. Department of Justice considered this a potential
health hazard. The Department alleged that the amphibole in
the waste rock (cummingtonite–grunerite) was asbestos and
the exposures would cause gastrointestinal cancer through
ingestion and lung cancer from inhalation of the water- and
airborne fibers (although they had done no calculation of
this).
The Reserve cohort consisted of 5,751 men, of which 907 had
worked for the company for >20 years and 298 were deceased.
The men had been exposed to respirable dust concentrations
from 0.02 to 2.75 mg/M3, the modal range being 0.2–0.6
mg/M3. The fibrous particulate content of the dust was
occasionally >0.5 fibers per ml (all fibers ≥5 μm),
but usually the concentration was much lower.
The observed and expected deaths and SMR for all men who had
worked one year or longer from 1952–1975 are given in Table
5. There was no relationship between the mortality observed
and lifetime exposure to silica dust (that was as high as
1,000 mg/M3 × years). There was no suggestion that deaths
from cancer increased after 10 or 20 years of latency. No
deaths from mesothelioma or asbestosis were reported.
Minnesota Taconite Miners.
A second epidemiological study of Minnesota taconite
workers employed at the Erie and Minntac mines was reported
(22). The study cohort, followed from 1947–1988 with a
minimum observation period of 30 years for all participants,
was made up of 3,341 men, of which 1,058 were deceased. Dusts
in the two mines are reported as containing 28–40% and 20%
quartz at Erie and Minntac mine, respectively. Concentrations
of fibrous particulates were nearly always <2 fibers per ml
(all fibers ≥5 μm). These fibrous particulates
included elongate cleavage fragments and are assumed to be
similar to those objects reported at Reserve Mining. The total
number of deaths was significantly fewer than expected, SMR =
83 (based on U.S. male rates) and 91 (based on Minnesota male
rates). SMR for all cancer (including lung cancer), diseases
of the circulatory system, and nonmalignant respiratory
disease were fewer than expected when compared with both
reference groups (Table 6).
There was one reported case of mesothelioma in a 62-year-old
worker whose exposure to taconite had begun only 11 years
before his death. Although latency periods as short as 15
years have been reported among insulation workers,
mesothelioma generally occurs following a long latency period
of 25 years or more (23). This person had previously been
employed in the railroad industry, as a locomotive fireman and
engineer, an occupational environment where both amosite and
crocidolite asbestos insulation was used and opportunity for
exposure existed (12). It is unlikely that this particular
taconite exposure contributed to the appearance of
mesothelioma.
Analysis of the mortality data, with a minimum latency period
of 30 years, provided no evidence to support any association
between exposure to quartz or elongated cleavage fragments of
amphibole with lung cancer, nonmalignant respiratory disease,
or any other specific disease.
Comparison of Occupational Cohorts Exposed to Iron Ore
and Asbestos.
The American and Canadian asbestos insulation workers
are generally thought to have had exposure to the three
principal commercial asbestos fiber types—grunerite
asbestos, crocidolite, and chrysotile (12). The tremolite
asbestos in the vermiculite at Libby, Montana has never been
extensively used in commerce in the United States. The
vermiculite workers are an example of the effect of amphibole
asbestos at concentrations of ≈1% in the ore. The
mortality experience of the two asbestos-exposed groups are
distinctly similar. Each shows an elevated risk of lung
cancer, mesothelioma, and asbestosis (a nonmalignant
respiratory disease). Of the 1,058 deaths reported in the most
recent study of Minnesota taconite workers, one would have
expected about 250 lung cancer (23.6%) and about 98
mesotheliomas (9.3%) if their mortality experience was similar
to American and Canadian insulators (11). Instead, the actual
number of lung cancer and mesotheliomas (Table 6) was 65
(6.1%) and 1 (0.09%), respectively.
Actually 32 fewer lung cancer occurred than the 97 expected (SMR
= 67) using the rates for U.S. white males. The one
mesothelioma that did occur had a latency of ≈11 years
in taconite mining. In the large insulation cohort (17,800
workers), no mesothelioma was reported with a latency <15
years, indicating the present case was unlikely to be related
to his taconite dust exposure (11, 23). The mortality
experience of the iron ore workers is, in fact, overall less
than expected, indicating they are healthier than the general
population. This healthy workers effect is commonly observed
among many employed groups.
Epidemiological and Lung Content Analysis of Grunerite
Asbestos-Exposed Workers.
Before the United States entering World War II, a
grunerite asbestos factory was established in Paterson, New
Jersey to supply the U.S. Navy with asbestos insulation for
the pipes, boilers, and turbines in ships. From 1941–1945,
933 men were recruited to work in this plant, which operated
until November 1954. Of these, 820 men formed a cohort and
provided a unique group of individuals with an intense
short-term exposure and a long-term follow-up (24).
Among these individuals, no mesotheliomas occurred with less
than a 6-month exposure history or a latency of <20 years.
Although the concentration of asbestos fibers in the air of
the Paterson plant was never determined, few occupational
health experts would estimate the exposure at <30 fibers
per ml (all fibers ≥5 μm). Therefore, 6 months of
work at the plant is equivalent to 15 fibers per ml × years.
The mean fiber levels in the iron ore mine are 0.05 fibers per
ml. Therefore, it would require about 300 years of exposure in
the iron ore mine to reach the 15 fiber per ml × years level.
For the workers in the Paterson plant the concentration of
grunerite asbestos present in the lung tissue of any
individual with an asbestos-related disease has not been
reported. However, in a report about workers in a British
grunerite asbestos factory, lung tissue taken at autopsy from
14 lung cancer and 5 mesothelioma cases were examined for
fiber levels (25). The mineral fibers were separated from the
lung tissue and analyzed by using ATEM. Although the factory
principally used grunerite asbestos, a small amount of
chrysotile had also been used. Of the 43 cases in which
sufficient tissue was available for fiber analysis, grunerite
asbestos was present at a 20-fold higher concentration than
the three other commercial asbestos fiber types. In both the
lung cancer and mesothelioma cases, ≈97% of the total
fiber burden was grunerite asbestos (Table 7). The mean fiber
concentration was about 1.483 × 109 and 1.035 × 109 fibers
per gram of dry lung tissue for lung cancer and mesothelioma,
respectively. The mean fiber concentration was ≈45%
higher in the lung cancer cases than in the mesothelioma
cases.
Assuming the total dry weight of an average pair of human
lungs to be ≈150 gm, the mean total concentration of
fiber in the five mesothelioma cases would be 1.5 × 1011
fibers (25). The mean fiber concentration in the air of the
iron mine was 0.05 fibers per ml (all fibers ≥ 5μm).
The fiber number in the lung tissue represents fibers of all
lengths, whereas the air data is only for those ≥5
μm. The 0.05 fibers per ml (all fibers ≥5 μm)
represents an index of the fibers present in the air.
The fibers <5 μm and ≥5 μm but too thin to
be visible by phase-contrast microscopy were not counted. One
method to approximate the total number of fibers per ml is to
interpolate from data where the total size distribution of
grunerite asbestos has been reported, as at the Penge Mine in
the Republic of South Africa (26). Using the length and
diameter data from Penge and assuming 0.05 fibers per ml
represents the fibers ≥5 μm in lengths and
≥0.25 μm in diameter, a multiplication factory of
6.2 was interpolated. The total fiber concentration in the
iron mine is therefore assumed to be 0.05 fibers per ml ×
6.2, or 0.33 fibers per ml (all fibers). A second method is to
add the fiber counts of 11 air samples from the mine analyzed
by phase-contrast optical microscopy and ATEM to estimate
total exposure. When the two values were added, the mean
exposure was 1.18 ± 0.57 fibers per ml (all fibers). The
exposure is 3.6-fold greater than that estimated by using the
size distribution of grunerite asbestos in the Penge mining
environment, although the mean exposure for the 11 air samples
was 0.08 ± 0.05 fibers per ml (all fibers ≥5 μm),
which exceeds the average of the 179 personal air samples of
0.05 ± 0.05 fibers per ml (all fibers ≥5 μm). All
of the grunerite asbestos fibers counted by ATEM were <5
μm long.
To inhale a concentration of fibers similar to the
concentration in the lung tissue of the mesothelioma cases
(1.5 × 1011 fibers) would require inhaling 4.7 × 1011 ml of
air in the iron ore mine, assuming an exposure of 0.33 fibers
per ml. For the purpose of this model, we pessimistically
assume no clearance, although the lung has mechanisms to clear
inhaled particles that can be very effective. Assuming on
average an individual inhales 10,000 ml of air per minute,
this is 600,000 ml per hour, or 4,800,000 ml per 8-hour shift.
This seems a very large number, but it would require
≈98,000 days in the iron ore mine with an exposure of
0.33 fibers per ml (at 1.18 fibers per ml exposure, it would
require 27,000 days) just to inhale a similar number of fibers
to that found in the only series of lung content analysis of
grunerite asbestos-related mesotheliomas. The range is
75–265 years of daily 8-hour shifts of exposure to inhale a
similar number of fibers to that found in the lung tissue of
the factory mesothelioma cases.
Risk Assessment from Mining in the Iron Ore Mine.
In the past, workers were exposed to aerosols
containing high concentrations of asbestos fibers. To obtain a
quantitative risk estimate from the low exposures, we used a
model developed for the Environmental Protection Agency to
quantify the risk of asbestos-related disease (27). This model
is developed to fit the type of data described above, the
exposures during mining of the iron ore are orders of
magnitude lower than the occupational exposures which occurred
in the cohorts used to parameterize the dose component in the
equations of the risk models. Nonetheless, the high
exposure-response relationships of the past were used to
interpolate the risk to the current low exposures encountered
in the iron ore mine in linear (proportional) relationships.
We know of no scientist who has argued that this linear
dose-response model underestimates the risk. The risk
assessment model requires that the concentrations of asbestos
fibers in the air be determined. Risk assessment is based on
counting all fibers ≥5 μm in length in the
occupational environment by phase-contrast microscopy, at
≈×500 magnification (Table 2).
Risk estimates were considered for the following two
scenarios: (i) A bench containing approximately 1 million tons
of rock was removed in 22 days. Assuming the average employee
is 45 years old, what is the lifetime risk for lung cancer and
mesothelioma? No air sampling was done at that site, and it is
uncertain whether any asbestos exposure took place. Assume the
fiber levels are similar to those given in Table 2. (ii)
Approximately 30 days of drilling remain to be done on the
bench containing the seam of grunerite asbestos (28 days in
the sill and two days in the waste iron formation). Assuming
the sill contains no asbestos (so far none has been found),
what would be the lifetime risk to the drillers for lung
cancer and mesothelioma assuming they are 45 years old?
Table 6-3 from the EPA risk model (27) was used. This table is
for an exposure to a concentration over a long time. It can be
used for a 2- or 22-day exposure if it is assumed that the
exposure integrated over time is the relevant parameter. (i)
There is a linear dose-response relationship. Any proposed
biological mechanism of which we are aware involves the
exposure integrated over time. (ii) If the peak exposure is
the parameter of concern, the risk is proportional to the
frequency of peak exposures. The integrated exposure is also
proportional to the total time of possible exposure and goes
down with time.
The average lung cancer risk among smokers and nonsmokers was
reported by the EPA. The risk number found in the EPA Table
6-3 is the average for smokers and nonsmokers, but the actual
lung cancer risk from asbestos exposure is five times less for
nonsmokers and double for smokers. Because mesotheliomas are
assumed not to be related to smoking, the number applies to
both smokers and nonsmokers.
Exposure.
The average of the exposures monitored is appropriate
for calculating the risk to a worker not otherwise identified.
The mean airborne concentration of 179 personal air samples
was 0.05 fibers per ml (all fibers ≥5 μm) (Table
2). This value assumes all the fibers were asbestos and that
each person was continuously exposed (8-hour time-weighted
average) over a 22-day period. The EPA calculated for
continuous exposure over different periods of time, and
therefore the iron ore mining exposure is converted to be
equal to the exposure average over 1 year, <E>.
<E> = 22/365 × 8/24 × 0.05 = 0.01 fibers per ml (all
fibers ≥5 μm). The life-time risk can be read
directly from Table 6-3 (27) at 30 and 50 years of age at
onset of exposure (45 years of age is interpolated) (Table 9).
Scenario I.
The total cancer risk for the individual exposure
beginning at 45 years of age is 0.1 and 0.6 in 100,000 for
nonsmokers and smokers, respectively (see Table 8 for
comparison with selected different lifestyles and
environmental exposures). This assumes a linear dose-response.
If all of the cancer risk is assumed to be lung cancer, it is
equivalent to smoking 2 or 12 cigarettes in a lifetime for 0.1
and 0.6 in 100,000 people respectively. The risk for someone
smoking one cigarette is 0.05 per 100,000 people (or, smoking
2 cigarettes is associated with a lung cancer risk of 1 in 1
million).
Scenario II.
In this scenario, there will be a 2-day exposure (not
the 22-day of Scenario I), so the risk becomes 2/22 or 1/11 of
the risk of Scenario I (0.1 in 1,000,000 for nonsmokers, and
0.6 in 1,000,000 for smokers) (Table 10).
These are risks accumulated in a lifetime. Note also that
according to the assumption pertaining to the risk
calculation; each new exposure adds to this risk independent
of the past risk. Of course, if asbestosis is a precondition
for lung cancer, there exists a lung cancer threshold (28,
29). Although new exposures can add to past ones, they only
increase the risk where the total exposure exceeds the
threshold. That the EPA model overestimates the risk of lung
cancer is widely believed (30). Although the above is a best
estimate, an important consideration is how much larger could
the risk be to that individual. An examination of Table 2
indicates the extreme exposure level of 0.39 fibers per ml
(all fibers ≥5 μm) was seven times larger than the
mean 0.05 fibers per ml (all fibers ≥5 μm). This
suggests the most extreme risk is seven times greater than
given above. These risks are put into perspective in Table 8.
Acknowledgments
We thank Mr. Paul Nordstrom for providing the survey of the
bench containing grunerite (amosite) asbestos. We acknowledge
support from a Higher Education Advanced Technology grant from
the State of New York and Cleveland-Cliffs, Inc.
ABBREVIATIONS
ATEM, transmission electron microscopy; SMR, standardized
mortality ratio; OSHA, Occupational Safety and Health
Administration; MSHA, Mine Safety and Health Administration.
References
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