Assessment of spirometric decline from silica dust: threshold values and calculation methods for cumulative exposure
Christin Schröder, Dennis Nowak

TL;DR
This study examines how silica dust exposure affects lung function and identifies a threshold below which no harm occurs.
Contribution
The study compares four models to determine the most biologically plausible threshold for silica dust exposure and lung function decline.
Findings
A critical annual exposure value of approximately 0.09-0.10 mg/m3 was identified.
Model 1 (constant annual threshold) showed the most biologically plausible relationship.
Exposure above 0.09 mg/m3 is associated with accelerated spirometric decline.
Abstract
This study investigates the association between crystalline silica dust exposure and lung function decline. Understanding whether exposure-response relationships include threshold values is critical for contributing to workplace health protection. We compared four mechanistically different models to determine which best characterizes this association. Data from 1,418 workers from the Wismut German Uranium Mining Cohort Study from 1970 to 1991 with 7,116 spirometry measurements were analysed. Cumulative exposure was calculated using a job exposure matrix. Four models based on different pathophysiological mechanisms were compared: (1) constant annual threshold without overload, (2) constant annual threshold with overload, (3) delayed onset (cumulative threshold only), and (4) dynamic threshold decreasing over time. Models 1, 3 and 4 showed a critical annual exposure value of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOccupational and environmental lung diseases · Air Quality and Health Impacts · Occupational exposure and asthma
