From the Journals

World Trade Center responders face greater cancer burden, including greater risk of multiple myeloma

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World Trade Center exposure and myeloma – correlation or causation?

When the heroes of the World Trade Center are diagnosed with even a common cancer, there is a natural tendency to assume that the diagnosis is the result of their service during the disaster. However, it is important to appreciate that the firefighting profession is known to be associated with higher risks of monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance and multiple myelomas, compared with the general population.

Given that, it would have been preferable to compare the World Trade Center–exposed populations with an equally intensively screened, age-matched cohort of firefighters from another major city.

If we apply Sir Richard Doll’s rule that a single epidemiologic study cannot be persuasive until the lower bound of the 95% confidence interval is greater than three, the relative risks in the study by Landgren and colleagues are too small to be persuasive.

The predicted increases in cancers of the prostate, thyroid, and myeloma are interesting, but these have also been previously reported in firefighters from other cities.

Despite this, we owe it to these men and women to find the truth and determine the illnesses that are associated with their service.

Otis W. Brawley, MD, is chief medical and scientific officer and executive vice president of the American Cancer Society and a professor at Emory University, Atlanta. These comments are taken from an accompanying editorial (JAMA Oncology. 2018 April 26. doi: 10.1001/jamaoncol.2018.0498.) No conflicts of interest were declared.


 

FROM JAMA ONCOLOGY


“These findings are of interest due to previously observed associations between light-chain multiple myeloma and light-chain MGUS and exposure to toxins, and chronic immune stimulation,” wrote Ola Landgren, MD, PhD, from the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center and his coauthors.

Seven patients were also assessed for CD20 expression – a marker of poorer prognosis – and 71% were found to be CD20-positive, a prevalence around 3.5-fold higher than that seen in the general population.

The cohort with multiple myeloma was diagnosed on average 12 years younger than those in the general population. The authors commented that this was unlikely to be caused by lead-time bias because the time from first symptoms to clinical manifestation of the disease is usually around 1 year.

“Taken together, our results show that environmental exposure due to the WTC attacks is associated with myeloma precursor disease (MGUS and light-chain MGUS) and may be a risk factor for the development of multiple myeloma at an earlier age, particularly the light-chain subtype,” the authors wrote.

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