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Occupation, gender, race, and lung cancer.

JOURNAL OF OCCUPATIONAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL MEDICINE(2008)

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Abstract
Objective: To examine associations between occupation and lung cancer by gender and race. Methods: We used data from the Maryland Lung Cancer Study of nonsmall cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC), a multicenter case control study, to estimate odds ratios (ORs) of NSCLC in different occupations. Results: After adjusting or smoking, environmental tobacco smoke, and other covariates, NSCLC ORs among women but not men were elevated in clerical-sales, service, and transportation-material handling occupations; ORs were significantly increased in all three categories (OR [95% confidence interval]: 4.07 [1.44 to 11.48]; 5.15 [1.62 to 16.34]; 7.82 [1.08 to 56.25], respectively), among black women, but only in transportation-material handling occupations (OR [95% confidence interval[: 3.43 [1.02 to 11.50]) among white women. Conclusions: Women, especially black women, in certain occupations had increased NSCLC ORs. (J Occup Environ Med. 2008;50:1167-1175)
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odds ratio
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