Abstract
BackgroundRespiratory irritants represent a major cause of occupational obstructive airway diseases. We provide an overview of the evidence related to irritative agents causing occupational asthma or occupational COPD.MethodsWe searched MEDLINE via PubMed. Reference lists of relevant reviews were also screened. The SIGN grading system was used to rate the quality of each study. The modified RCGP three-star system was used to grade the body of evidence for each irritant agent regarding its causative role in either occupational asthma or occupational COPD.ResultsA total of 474 relevant papers were identified, covering 188 individual agents, professions or work-sites. The focus of most of the studies and the predominant diagnosis was occupational asthma, whereas occupational COPD arose only incidentally.The highest level assigned using the SIGN grading was 2+ (well-conducted systematic review, cohort or case–control study with a low risk of confounding or bias). According to the modified RCGP three-star grading, the strongest evidence of association with an individual agent, profession or work-site (“**”) was found for 17 agents or work-sites, including benzene-1,2,4-tricarboxylicacid-1,2-anhydride, chlorine, platinum salt, isocyanates, cement dust, grain dust, animal farming, environmental tobacco smoke, welding fumes or construction work. Phthalic anhydride, glutaraldehyde, sulphur dioxide, cotton dust, cleaning agents, potrooms, farming (various), foundries were found to be moderately associated with occupational asthma or occupational COPD (“*[+]”).ConclusionThis study let us assume that irritant-induced occupational asthma and especially occupational COPD are considerably underreported. Defining the evidence of the many additional occupational irritants for causing airway disorders will be the subject of continued studies with implications for diagnostics and preventive measures.
Highlights
Overview on publications retrieved The database search (MEDLINE/ PubMed) yielded 383 potentially relevant publications. 480 additional potentially relevant publications were retrieved from the reference lists of 13 systematic reviews or overviews [2,30,36,80,89,90,91,92,93,94,95,96,97], from occupational diseases routine statistics
Most (n = 337) of the 474 relevant publications were identified through hand searching
The 474 publications refer to 131 individual agents, 46 to “mixed” agents and 11 to work-sites or professions reported to cause occupational asthma (OA) and/ or occupational chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)
Summary
Bronchial asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) are common conditions and are the dominating obstructive airway diseases in the general population.Work-related asthma (WRA) including irritant-induced occupational asthma (OA) Occupational asthma is defined as a chronic inflammatory disorder of the airways with recurrent episodes of coughing, wheezing, chest tightness, dyspnea, shortnessThe available epidemiological and comparative studies and reviews provide evidence that occupational agents cause 5 – 25% of all asthma cases [1,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23]. Occupational agents eliciting bronchial asthma, i.e. OA, comprise occupational allergens, with their well-defined etiological role and IgE-mediated pathomechanism, as well as occupational agents with unknown pathomechanisms and occupational respiratory irritants, mainly representing low molecular weight chemicals (LMW;
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