# Evaluating the QEAS-7 questionnaire as a predictor of asbestos burden in lung tissue among lung cancer patients: insights from the AMCANES study

**Authors:** Galo Granados, Antía Ferreiro, Carlos Gómez-Ollés, Francisco-Javier González-Barcala, Annie Navarro, Roser Costa, Fernando Romero, Belén Marín, María E. Barroso, Isabel Urrutia, Sandra Dorado-Arenas, Ane Uranga Echeverría, José-María Marín, Larraitz Garcia, Sara Calero, Mayte Martín-Bustamante, Coral Márquez, María-Jesús Cruz, Jaume Ferrer

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/ftox.2026.1733214 · Frontiers in Toxicology · 2026-03-06

## TL;DR

This study evaluates the QEAS-7 questionnaire as a tool to predict asbestos exposure in lung cancer patients when tissue analysis is not available.

## Contribution

The study demonstrates that combining occupational and domestic exposure domains in QEAS-7 achieves 100% sensitivity for detecting high asbestos burden.

## Key findings

- QEAS-7 questionnaire detected elevated asbestos burden with 100% sensitivity when combining occupational and domestic exposure domains.
- 29% of patients classified as non-exposed by QEAS-7 still had measurable asbestos bodies in their lung tissue.
- Occupational exposure accounted for 71.4% of elevated asbestos burden cases.

## Abstract

Asbestos exposure is a known risk factor for lung cancer, and quantifying asbestos bodies (ABs) in lung tissue remains the gold standard for assessing cumulative exposure. However, histological analysis is not routinely available in many clinical settings. The validated QEAS-7 questionnaire was developed to evaluate occupational, domestic, and environmental asbestos exposure. This study examined the association between QEAS-7 exposure classifications and the asbestos burden in lung cancer patients.

A cross-sectional multicenter study was conducted across nine Spanish hospitals. Patients with histologically confirmed lung cancer undergoing surgical resection completed the QEAS-7 questionnaire. Non-tumoral lung tissue samples were analyzed for Abs and asbestos burden was categorized according to AB concentration (with elevated burden defined as >1000 AB/g). Diagnostic performance metrics were evaluated.

Among 133 patients (median age 67 years; 77% male), ABs were detected in 61% of samples, with 5% showing an elevated asbestos burden (>1000 AB/g). Occupational exposure was reported by 36% of patients and accounted for 71.4% of cases with elevated burden. Domestic exposure was reported by 9% of patients and detected in 28.6% of elevated-burden cases. The combined occupational and domestic exposure domain achieved 100% sensitivity for detecting elevated asbestos burden, while occupational and domestic domains alone showed sensitivities of 71.4% and 28.6%, respectively. Specificity and positive predictive values remained modest. Notably, 29% of patients classified as ‘non-exposed’ by QEAS-7 had measurable ABs.

The QEAS-7 questionnaire demonstrated high sensitivity for detecting elevated asbestos burden when combining occupational and domestic exposures. While histological analysis remains the definitive method, QEAS-7 offers a practical screening alternative, when lacking access to tissue-based diagnostics or occupational hygiene expertise.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** lung cancer (MONDO:0005138)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** lung cancer (MESH:D008175)
- **Chemicals:** AB (-), Asbestos (MESH:D001194)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

37 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13002167/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13002167