Combining Three Cohorts of World Trade Center Rescue/Recovery Workers for Assessing Cancer Incidence and Mortality
Robert Brackbill; Amy Kahn; Jiehui Li; Rachel Zeig-Owens; David Goldfarb; Molly Skerker; Mark Farfel; James Cone; Janette Yung; Deborah Walker; Adrienne Solomon; Baozhen Qiao; Maria Schymura; Christopher Dasaro; Dana Kristjansson; Mayris Webber; Roberto Lucchini; Andrew Todd; David Prezant; Paolo Boffetta; Charles Hall
Three cohorts including the Fire Department of the City of New York (FDNY), the World Trade Center Health Registry (WTCHR), and the General Responder Cohort (GRC), each funded by the World Trade Center Health Program have reported associations between WTC-exposures and cancer. Results have generally been consistent with effect estimates for excess incidence for all cancers ranging from 6 to 14% above background rates. Pooling would increase sample size and de-duplicate cases between the cohorts. However, pooling required time consuming steps: obtaining Institutional Review Board (IRB) approvals and legal agreements from entities involved: establishing an honest broker for managing the data: de-duplicating the pooled cohort files: applying to State Cancer Registries (SCRs) for matched cancer cases: and finalizing analysis data files. Obtaining SCR data use agreements ranged from 6.5 to 114.5 weeks with six states requiring >:20 weeks. Records from FDNY (n = 16,221), WTCHR (n = 29,372), and GRC (n = 33,427) were combined de-duplicated resulting in 69,102 unique individuals. Overall, 7894 cancer tumors were matched to the pooled cohort, increasing the number cancers by as much as 58% compared to previous analyses. Pooling resulted in a coherent resource for future research for studies on rare cancers and mortality, with more representative of occupations and WTC- exposure.
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