The link between asbestos and pleural cancer in offshore petroleum workers

October 21, 2024

Men who work offshore and have been in contact with asbestos in their working environment have a higher risk of developing pleural cancer. – In our study we found an association between exposure to asbestos in offshore working environments and pleural cancer in offshore petroleum workers. Estimates the risk among Norwegian offshore workersThe research group EpiStat at the Department of Biostatistics collaborates with the Cancer Registry of Norway on research into cancer risk among offshore workers. However, based on a coarser categorisation of the offshore workers’ work history outside offshore work, the risk of pleural cancer may also be linked to their potential exposure to asbestos before they began work in the offshore industry. More information:Exposure to fibres and risk of pleural mesothelioma in the Norwegian Offshore Petroleum Workers cohortResearch group project site: Occupational health risks offshore

Men who work offshore and have been in contact with asbestos in their working environment have a higher risk of developing pleural cancer.

Our findings can help develop measures targeted at preventing cancer but are also important when assessing whether it is the actual offshore work that is the cause of the cancer, says researcher Leon Mclaren Berge of the Department of Biostatistics. (Photo: Cecilie Bakken Høstmark, UiO)

The risk of pleural cancer may also be linked to having worked in an environment containing asbestos before beginning work offshore. These are among the findings of a new study involving 25,000 offshore workers.

– In our study we found an association between exposure to asbestos in offshore working environments and pleural cancer in offshore petroleum workers. Findings like this can help develop measures targeted at preventing cancer but are also important when assessing whether it is the actual offshore work that is the cause of the cancer, says researcher Leon Mclaren Berge of the Department of Biostatistics at the Institute of Basic Medical Sciences.

Estimates the risk among Norwegian offshore workers

The research group EpiStat at the Department of Biostatistics collaborates with the Cancer Registry of Norway on research into cancer risk among offshore workers. In 2022, the group was awarded 10 million kroners by the Research Council of Norway to study other diseases that offshore workers can be exposed to through their profession.

The fact that asbestos can cause pleural cancer has been known for a long time, says Berge.

– But our study is the first to estimate this risk among Norwegian offshore workers using detailed and expert-assessed data on asbestos exposure. However, based on a coarser categorisation of the offshore workers’ work history outside offshore work, the risk of pleural cancer may also be linked to their potential exposure to asbestos before they began work in the offshore industry. This is an important discovery which contributes to our understanding of the disease risks faced by such workers, he says.

Focus on the oil pioneers

In recent years, there has been a good deal of focus on the oil pioneers and whether they have fallen ill because of their work offshore and should therefore receive compensation.

The study is funded by the Research Council of Norway.

More information:

Exposure to fibres and risk of pleural mesothelioma in the Norwegian Offshore Petroleum Workers cohort

Research group project site: Occupational health risks offshore

The source of this news is from University of Oslo

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