Risk of Mortality From Esophageal Cancer Among US Poultry Workers, 1950−2019
Leanna Delhey, Christina Joshua, Jaimi L. Allen, Robert Delongchamp, Benjamin C. Amick, Wendy Nembhard

TL;DR
This study found that working in poultry plants may increase the risk of dying from esophageal cancer, but the results need further validation.
Contribution
The study is the first to investigate the link between poultry work and esophageal cancer mortality in a large US cohort.
Findings
Working in poultry plants was associated with a 62% higher risk of esophageal cancer mortality in the full cohort.
The sub-cohort analysis showed a 65% increased risk of esophageal cancer mortality for poultry workers.
Survey respondents showed a decreased risk, but the result was not statistically significant.
Abstract
While research suggests poultry industry workers have an increased risk of cancer mortality, little is known about their risk of esophageal cancer mortality. We investigated the association between working with poultry and esophageal cancer mortality while concurrently investigating other occupational and nonoccupational risk factors amongst poultry industry workers. We conducted a case‐cohort analysis from a cohort of unionized workers in the United States (N = 46,816) and conducted follow‐up for mortality from 1950 to 2019 with the National Death Index. Cases were those who died of esophageal cancer and a sub‐cohort was randomly selected (N = 2666) for further analysis. We interviewed participants and relatives about their work and personal life. We used multivariable Cox proportional hazards regression to estimate the hazard of esophageal cancer mortality due to working with poultry…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEsophageal and GI Pathology
