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Diesel exhaust and lung cancer: aftermath of becoming an IARC Group 1 Carcinogen

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Article

Silverman, Debra T.

American Journal of Epidemiology

2018

187

6

1149-1152

diesel engine ; exhaust gases ; lung cancer ; carcinogens ; carcinogenicity ; comment

Occupational diseases

http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/aje/kwy036

English

Bibliogr.;Ill.

"The International Agency for Research on Cancer reclassified diesel exhaust from Group 2A (probably carcinogenic to humans) to Group 1 (carcinogenic to humans) in 2012. Since then, reevaluation and reanalysis of 2 major studies (Diesel Exhaust in Miners Study and Trucking Industry Particle Study) that were influential to the International Agency for Research on Cancer evaluation have replicated the original findings and demonstrated the suitability of these epidemiologic data for the quantitative risk assessment needed to set safe exposure limits in occupational and outdoor ambient environments. The challenge now is to protect the workers and general populations in urban areas from the carcinogenicity of diesel exhaust."

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