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Mesothelioma News |
Proposed Studies Would Address Health Concerns Associated With Mining Activity In Northeastern Minnesota
One of the studies would focus on new concerns about asbestos-related cancer in mine workers. March 28, 2007 -- The Minnesota Department of Health (MDH) is proposing two new health studies addressing potential health concerns in northeastern Minnesota.
One of the studies would focus on the health of mine workers in the region. The other would assess the potential health impact of specific types of airborne mineral fragments generated by ore processing activity on the east end of Minnesota’s iron range. The assessment would then be used to set regulatory exposure limits for those materials.
MDH proposed the new mine worker study after receiving reports of additional mesothelioma cases in a group of mine workers who had been the subject of an earlier study, completed in 2003.
Mesothelioma is a rare, fatal form of cancer seen almost exclusively
in people who have been exposed to asbestos. When the earlier study
was conducted,
MDH had identified 17 diagnosed cases of mesothelioma in a group of
72,000 people who worked in Minnesota’s iron mining industry between the
1930s and 1982.
MDH has since identified 35 additional cases of mesothelioma in that
group, raising the total number of cases to 52. MDH officials say it's
not surprising to see additional reports of the illness among the miners
in the 2003 study, since it can take as long as 40 or 50 years to develop
mesothelioma following exposure to asbestos.
The earlier study concluded that the 17 original mesothelioma cases
were most likely caused by exposure to forms of asbestos that are found
in a variety of industrial settings, and are not unique to the mining
industry.
“ The mesothelioma issue has been with us for a long time,” said Minnesota Health Commissioner Dianne Mandernach. “There
are important, unresolved questions that we need to address, and we believe
this new study will help us provide some of the answers.
“ Although the new mesothelioma cases are a major health concern in their own right, they’re just part of a larger picture,” she added. “Since
mesothelioma is usually an indicator of asbestos exposure, the workers
we studied may also be at risk for other asbestos-related illnesses like lung
cancer and asbestosis. Those diseases potentially affect much larger
numbers
of people.”
The new study will focus on the same group of workers, comparing workers
who developed mesothelioma with those who did not, in an effort to determine
what aspects of their jobs might have placed them at risk.
The second MDH study would assess the health risks associated with airborne
mineral fragments from ore mined in some areas on the east end of the range.
The risk assessment will assist in setting airborne exposure limits designed
to protect the general public from any potential health effects associated
with those materials.
The new regulatory exposure limits will be established using a new methodology,
to be developed as part of the study. In developing the new methodology,
MDH will use data from animal studies that had previously been collected
by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
This new methodology may also be useful in setting site-specific exposure
limits at other locations in the state where ore could contain mineral fragments
posing a potential health concern.
MDH plans to seek federal funding for the mesothelioma study from the
National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) and other
sources. Once funding is obtained, the study is expected to take three years
to complete, at a cost ranging from $750,000 to $1 million.
The mineral fragment study is expected to take about a year once the
animal study data becomes available from EPA, at an estimated cost of $250,000.
The proposed study of mesothelioma in mine workers will expand and build
on the 2003 study, which was the first to ever conclusively document the
occurrence of mesothelioma in Minnesota mine workers.
The earlier study looked at the work histories of the 17 miners with
mesothelioma, in an effort to determine what might have exposed them
to asbestos. While
MDH investigators were conservative about drawing conclusions from the
2003 study, they suggested that the 17 original mesothelioma cases were
most likely
caused by exposure to “commercial” asbestos.
Commercial asbestos includes a variety of products and materials that
have commonly been used in industrial settings, but are not unique to
mining operations – including
materials used in plumbing, carpentry, boiler operation, and maintenance
work.
The new study would differ from the earlier one in two important ways.
First, it would focus on possible past exposure of workers to taconite dust,
as well as potential exposure to commercial asbestos. Second, it would use
a case-control strategy to compare the work experience of people who developed
mesothelioma and those who did not.
The relationship between respiratory disease and mining work has been
a continuing concern in northeastern Minnesota, where unusually high
rates of
mesothelioma have been reported among male residents in the general population
since the late 1980s. Between 1988 and 2005, 136 cases of mesothelioma
were diagnosed in men who live in that part of the state – more than twice
the expected number.
Some of the elevation in men can be explained by the fact that over 5,000
people once worked at an asbestos ceiling tile factory in Cloquet. However,
officials say that doesn’t account for all of the additional cases. It’s
not clear how many of the 136 cases have occurred in men who were among
the 72,000
mine workers included in the 2003 study. The new study will attempt to
clarify that connection.
There has been no elevation in mesothelioma rates among women who live
in that region of the state.
Source: http://www.health.state.mn.us/ |