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Data File: MCD94A01


 
Data Files (1):
Study Name: Mallinckrodt Chemical Works Cohort Mortality Study of White Males
Cohort Size: 2,542
Races: White
Sexes: Male
Diseases: Cancer and Non-Cancer Mortality
Earliest Exposure: 01/01/1942
Latest Exposure: 12/31/1966
Follow-Up: 12/31/1979
Exposure Type: No data available.
Exposure Agent: No data available.
Covariate: Radon Breath Monitoring Indicator, Number of DOE Facilities, Total Number of Days Employed
Sites: Mallinckrodt Chemical Works
Description:
This analytic data file set consists of one file generated for a retrospective cohort mortality study of white males employed in the Uranium Division of MCW in Missouri by Elizabeth Dupree.
The study cohort comprised 2,542 white males employed for at least 30 days from 1942 through plant shutdown in 1966. Excluded were 556 females, 43 non-white males, as well as those employed for less than 30 days or having "critical errors" in their data. Follow-up was through the end of 1988. The total person-years of follow-up was 79,600 with a median of 27.3 years. A typical worker was first employed in 1951 at 30 years of age and worked slightly more than 5.5 years. The all-causes SMR was 0.94 with 95% confidence interval 0.87 to 1.00. The elevation in the all-cancers SMR of 1.13 (0.99 to 1.28) resulted from increases in a variety of cancers, particularly in those of the digestive and respiratory systems and prostate and brain cancer.
The single analytic file, MCD94A01_d1, contains a record for each member of the cohort, which includes vital status as of January 1, 1989. The last SSA submission for this population provided "alive" status as of January 1, 1985; the "alive" category is no longer obtainable from SSA. However, NDI provides a record of all deaths occurring since January 1, 1979, and Pension Benefit Information Incorporated (PBI) also identifies deceased individuals. If not identified as deceased by SSA, NDI, or PBI, individuals last known to be alive before January 1, 1979 were considered lost to follow-up on the last date known alive, while those known to be alive after January 1, 1979 were considered alive at the end of the study. There were 837 deaths from all causes with death certificates available for 98.2% of these individuals. Causes of death were coded to ICDA8.
MCW was one of the oldest and largest uranium processing facilities in the United States, operating in St. Louis, Missouri from 1942 to 1958 and in Weldon Springs, Missouri from 1958 through 1966. From 1946 through 1955, pitchblend ore was used in the processing of uranium dioxide and uranium metal. This ore was a dry solid that dusted easily and was up to 60% pure uranium, resulting in exposure levels that may have been nearly 200 times the contemporary maximum permissible concentration. Most of the uranium compounds present were relatively insoluble. Potential exposures included gamma (from radium), beta, and alpha radiation; thorium; and chemicals including nitric and hydrofluoric acids. Each employee had a pre-employment and annual physical exam, with abnormal findings leading to a transfer to another division of MCW. Transferred workers remain in this study cohort with follow-up through 1988. The exposure variables available include pitchblende (categorical), thorium (categorical), uranium urine bioassay (categorical), whether film badge readings were available, and whether radon breath monitoring was completed.

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