消防员癌症队列研究:纵向职业队列研究方案。

IF 1.4 Q3 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Jefferey L Burgess, Shawn C Beitel, Miriam M Calkins, Melissa A Furlong, Paola Louzado Feliciano, Jamie Kolar Gabriel, Casey Grant, Jaclyn M Goodrich, Judith M Graber, Olivia Healy, James Hollister, Jeff Hughes, Sara Jahnke, Krystal Kern, Frank A Leeb, Alberto J Caban-Martinez, Alexander C Mayer, Russell Osgood, Cynthia Porter, Sreenivasan Ranganathan, Heather M Stapleton, Natasha Schaefer Solle, Christine Toennis, Derek J Urwin, Michelle Valenti, John J Gulotta
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:与普通人群相比,消防员患癌症和其他健康状况的风险更高。然而,造成这些风险的具体暴露和机制尚不完全清楚。这些信息对于制定和测试保护性干预措施至关重要。目的:消防员癌症队列研究(FFCCS)的目的是与消防部门一起开展社区参与的研究,以推进消防员暴露的评估和减少,同时了解和减轻导致癌症和其他健康状况风险增加的影响。这包括建立一项长期(bb0 - 30年)消防员多中心前瞻性队列研究。方法:FFCCS的结构包括一个消防监督和规划委员会,以提供指导和促进研究人员与消防组织之间的沟通;负责调查数据收集和数据管理的数据协调中心;利用定量暴露数据构建消防员工作暴露矩阵的暴露评估中心;和一个生物标记分析中心,包括一个生物储存库。这两个中心共同评估了消防员接触有毒物质与健康影响之间的关系。消防员研究联络员参与研究的所有阶段。FFCCS的研究设计主要使用一组核心和特定项目的调查问题,以及收集的生物样本(血液和尿液),以分析暴露和影响的生物标志物。在进入研究时收集数据和样本,在符合条件的暴露后和入组后每隔一段时间(例如,1-2年)收集后续数据和样本。FFCCS数据收集和分析的发展是为了评估特定消防员群体的独特暴露;癌症的风险;终点除了癌症,比如生育结果。招聘是在合作消防部门和合格参与者(包括美国现役职业消防员和志愿消防员)的协调下进行的。结果:FFCCS协议开发于2016年首次由美国联邦紧急事务管理局资助,并于2018年2月开始登记。截至2024年9月,来自31个州的275个部门的6200名参与者已经注册,包括新招募的和现任的消防员。对生物样本进行了分析,以确定其暴露程度和影响。参加FFCCS的特定群体包括职业和志愿结构消防员、女消防员、培训师、火灾调查员、荒地消防员、应对荒地-城市交界火灾的消防员和机场消防员。同行评议的已发表的结果包括暴露的测量和消防暴露的毒性影响。只要有可能,研究结果都会反馈给每个参与者。结论:FFCCS是一项独特的、社区参与的、多中心的前瞻性队列研究,主要关注消防服务。研究结果有助于评估美国消防服务多个部门的暴露、影响和预防性干预措施,具有广泛的全国意义。国际注册报告标识符(irrid): DERR1-10.2196/70522。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Fire Fighter Cancer Cohort Study: Protocol for a Longitudinal Occupational Cohort Study.

Background: Firefighters are at an increased risk of cancer and other health conditions compared with the general population. However, the specific exposures and mechanisms contributing to these risks are not fully understood. This information is critical to formulate and test protective interventions.

Objective: The purpose of the Fire Fighter Cancer Cohort Study (FFCCS) is to conduct community-engaged research with the fire service to advance the evaluation and reduction of firefighter exposures, along with understanding and mitigating effects leading to an increased risk of cancer and other health conditions. This involves establishing a long-term (>30 years) firefighter multicenter prospective cohort study.

Methods: The structure of the FFCCS includes a fire service oversight and planning board to provide guidance and foster communication between researchers and fire organizations; a data coordinating center overseeing survey data collection and data management; an exposure assessment center working with quantitative exposure data to construct a firefighter job exposure matrix; and a biomarker analysis center, including a biorepository. Together, the centers evaluate the association between firefighter exposures and toxic health effects. Firefighter research liaisons are involved in all phases of the research. The FFCCS research design primarily uses a set of core and project-specific survey questions accompanied by a collection of biological samples (blood and urine) for the analysis of biomarkers of exposure and effect. Data and samples are collected upon entry into the study, with subsequent collection after eligible exposures, and at intervals (eg, 1-2 years) after enrollment. FFCCS data collection and analysis have been developed to evaluate unique exposures for specific firefighter groups; cancer risks; and end points in addition to cancer, such as reproductive outcomes. Recruitment is carried out with coordination from partnering fire departments and eligible participants, including active career and volunteer firefighters in the United States.

Results: The FFCCS protocol development was first funded by the US Federal Emergency Management Agency in 2016, with enrollment beginning in February 2018. As of September 2024, >6200 participants from >275 departments across 31 states have enrolled, including recruit and incumbent firefighters. Biological samples have been analyzed for measures of exposure and effect. Specific groups enrolled in the FFCCS include career and volunteer structural firefighters, women firefighters, trainers, fire investigators, wildland firefighters, firefighters responding to wildland-urban interface fires, and airport firefighters. Peer-reviewed published results include measurement of exposures and the toxic effects of firefighting exposure. Whenever possible, research results are provided back to individual participants.

Conclusions: The FFCCS is a unique, community-engaged, multicenter prospective cohort study focused on the fire service. Study results contribute to the evaluation of exposures, effects, and preventive interventions across multiple sectors of the US fire service, with broad implications nationally.

International registered report identifier (irrid): DERR1-10.2196/70522.

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CiteScore
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