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How farming exposure affects lung development in young adults

Anneli C.S. Bolund, Ioannis Basinas, Grethe Elholm, Martin R. Miller, Øyvind Omland, Vivi Schlünssen, Torben Sigsgaard
European Respiratory Journal 2013 42: P1556; DOI:
Anneli C.S. Bolund
1Department of Public Health, Section of Environment, Occupation and Health, University of Aarhus, Aarhus C, Denmark
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Ioannis Basinas
1Department of Public Health, Section of Environment, Occupation and Health, University of Aarhus, Aarhus C, Denmark
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Grethe Elholm
1Department of Public Health, Section of Environment, Occupation and Health, University of Aarhus, Aarhus C, Denmark
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Martin R. Miller
2Institute of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, United Kingdom
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Øyvind Omland
3Department of Occupational Medicine, Aalborg University Hospital, Aalborg, Denmark
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Vivi Schlünssen
1Department of Public Health, Section of Environment, Occupation and Health, University of Aarhus, Aarhus C, Denmark
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Torben Sigsgaard
1Department of Public Health, Section of Environment, Occupation and Health, University of Aarhus, Aarhus C, Denmark
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Abstract

Exposure to organic dust in agricultural work has been associated with lower lung function. Longitudinal studies on lung function decline in agricultural workers are few. We studied 1,964 farming students and 407 controls in 1992/4, and 963 and 172 of these again in 2007/8. Spirometry, a health questionaire, smoking and occupational history were collected each time. Cumulative dust and endotoxin exposures were estimated from job-exposure matrices based on personal dust measurements. Lung function was expressed as z-scores using the LMS equations (Stanojevic S, et al. AJRCCM 2008; 177: 253-60). In 1135 subjects with longitudinal data and aged<25 yrs at baseline the FEV1 z-score change (ΔzFEV1) was positive (i.e. was an increase) for female farmers (mean±SD of 0.08±0.78), male farmers (0.09±0.69) and controls (0.17±0.68) with the same for ΔzFVC (0.18±0.80, 0.39±0.76 and 0.54±0.67, respectively, p<0.001 ANOVA). This confirms that longitudinal lung function change is less than that estimated from cross sectionally derived equations such as LMS. Current farming had an adverse effect on ΔzFVC versus never farming (-0.19, 95% CI of -0.33 to -0.06) and the effect of 3rd quartile dust and 3rd quartile endotoxin exposure versus 1st quartile was also adverse (-0.15, -0.27 to -0.03) and (-0.19, -0.31 to -0.07) in multivariate linear regression controlling for age, height, smoking, weight, farm upbringing, bronchial hyperresponsivenss and atopy. This effect was not seen for the 4th quartiles. There was no effect modification by smoking or sex. We conclude that moderate farming exposures had a significant effect on lung development. This was not seen in those most heavily exposed which could reflect healthy workers selection.

  • Lung growth/development
  • Occupation
  • Epidemiology
  • © 2013 ERS
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How farming exposure affects lung development in young adults
Anneli C.S. Bolund, Ioannis Basinas, Grethe Elholm, Martin R. Miller, Øyvind Omland, Vivi Schlünssen, Torben Sigsgaard
European Respiratory Journal Sep 2013, 42 (Suppl 57) P1556;

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How farming exposure affects lung development in young adults
Anneli C.S. Bolund, Ioannis Basinas, Grethe Elholm, Martin R. Miller, Øyvind Omland, Vivi Schlünssen, Torben Sigsgaard
European Respiratory Journal Sep 2013, 42 (Suppl 57) P1556;
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