Abstract

Chromosome aberrations in the peripheral blood lymphocytes of styrene exposed workers have been suggested as a potential early marker for cancer risk. We performed a critical review and abstracted data from all studies using current chromosome aberration scoring criteria and providing at least a mean and standard deviation or standard error for the exposed and comparison groups. Using these data, we conducted a meta-analysis of occupational styrene exposed workers and incidence of chromosome aberrations. Our meta-analysis used the standardized mean difference as the summary statistic since all studies assess the same outcome but use different comparison populations. The primary meta-analysis of the 20 comparisons of 505 styrene exposed workers to 532 comparison workers found a meta-mean difference of 0.361 (95 % CI −0.084 to 0.807, random effects model), but there was substantial lack of consistency across studies (I2 of 90.11, p-value <0.001, fixed effect model). Studies with higher styrene exposures had lower mean standard differences compared to studies with lower styrene exposures. While studies of styrene workers overall had a slight increase in chromosomal aberrations relative to comparison groups, the lack of consistency across studies and the absence of an exposure response and other limitations of the reviewed studies including inadequate exposure assessment, small numbers of participants per study, and poorly matched exposed and comparison workers, we find insufficient evidence to support a conclusion that styrene exposure increases chromosome aberration frequencies in styrene workers.

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