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Wood Dust and Formaldehyde

IARC Monographs on the Evaluation of Carcinogenic Risks to Humans, No. 62

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This volume of the IARC Monographs evaluates the carcinogenic risk to humans posed by occupational exposures to wood dust and formaldehyde. A number of occupational situations that involve exposure to wood dust also entail exposure to formaldehyde, as in plywood and particle board manufacture, during furniture and cabinet-making, and during parquet floor sanding and varnishing.

The carcinogenic risks of wood dust are evaluated in the first monograph. The highest occupational exposures were noted to occur in wood furniture and cabinet manufacture, especially during machine sanding and similar operations, in the finishing departments of plywood and particle-board mills, and in the workroom air of sawmills and planer mills near chippers, saws, and planers. Citing findings from several recent well-designed case-control studies, the monograph concludes that occupational exposure to wood dust is causally related to adenocarcinoma of the nasal cavities and paranasal sinuses. The evaluation further concluded that the excess risk of cancer is attributable to wood dust per se, rather than to other exposures in the workplace. Wood dust was classified as carcinogenic to humans.

Cancer risk associated with occupational exposure to formaldehyde is assessed in the second monograph. The assessment draws on findings from several cohort and case-control investigations of the relationship between exposure to formaldehyde and cancer of the oral cavity, pharynx, and respiratory tract. Citing inconsistencies in the reported results, the monograph concludes that these epidemiological studies can do no more than suggest a causal role of occupational exposure to formaldehyde in carcinoma of the nasal cavities and paranasal sinuses. The review found no evidence of excess risk for oropharyngeal, laryngeal or lung cancer among exposed workers. Several studies in which formaldehyde was administered to rats by inhalation showed evidence of carcinogenicity. Similar studies in hamsters showed no evidence of carcinogenicity, and studies in mice either showed no effect or were inadequate for evaluation. In rats administered formaldehyde in drinking-water, increased incidences were seen of forestomach papillomas in one study and of leukaemias and gastrointestinal tract tumours in another; two other studies gave negative results. Formaldehyde was classified as probably carcinogenic to humans.

Corrigenda to the IARC Monographs are published online at http://monographs.iarc.fr/ENG/Publications/corrigenda.php.

Corrigenda to Volume 62. (PDF, 65K)

LIBRARY CATALOGUING DATA

IARC MONOGRAPHS

In 1969, the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) initiated a programme on the evaluation of the carcinogenic risk of chemicals to humans involving the production of critically evaluated monographs on individual chemicals. In 1980 and 1986, the programme was expanded to include the evaluation of the carcinogenic risk associated with exposures to complex mixtures and other agents.

The objective of the programme is to elaborate and publish in the form of monographs critical reviews of data on carcinogenicity for agents to which humans are known to be exposed, and on specific exposure situations; to evaluate these data in terms of human risk with the help of international working groups of experts in carcinogenesis and related fields; and to indicate where additional research efforts are needed.

This project was supported by PHS Grant No. 5-UO1 CA33193-13 awarded by the United States National Cancer Institute, Department of Health and Human Services. Additional support has been provided since 1986 by the European Commission.

  • ©International Agency for Research on Cancer 1995
  • IARC Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
  • IARC Working Group on the Evaluation of Carcinogenic Risks to
  • Humans (1994: Lyon, France)
  • Wood dust and formaldehyde : views and expert opinions of an IARC
  • Working Group on the Evaluation of Carcinogenic Risks to Rumans
  • which met in Lyon, 11-18 October 1994.
  • (IARC monographs on the evaluation of carcinogenic risks to hum ans ; 62)
  • 1. Dust — adverse effects — congresses 2. Formaldehyde — adverse effects — congresses 3. Neoplasms — chemically induced — congres ses 4. Wood — congres ses I. Series
  • ISBN 92 832 1262 2
  • ISSN 0250-9555
  • (NLM Classification: WI)
  • Publications of the World Health Organization enjoy copyright protection in accordance with the provisions of Protocol 2 of the Universal Copyright Convention.
  • All rights reserved. Application for rights of reproduction or translation, in part or in toto, should be made to the International Agency for Research on Cancer.
  • Distributed for the International Agency for Research on Cancer by the Secretariat of the World Health Organzation, Geneva
  • PRINTED IN THE UK
©International Agency for Research on Cancer, 1995.
Bookshelf ID: NBK493455

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