Funeral workers risk cancer from formaldehyde
Fri Nov 20, 2009 4:58pm EST
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Morticians who use formaldehyde to embalm bodies have a
higher risk of leukemia, researchers reported on Friday. They found deaths from
one particular kind of leukemia, myeloid leukemia, increased the longer the
workers were involved with embalming. Their study of more than 400 funeral
workers is the first to look carefully at the association, they reported in the
Journal of the National Cancer Institute. "Previous studies have shown excess
mortality from lymphohematopoietic malignancies and brain cancer in anatomists,
pathologists, and funeral industry workers, all of whom may have worked with
formaldehyde," Laura Freeman of the U.S. National Cancer Institute and
colleagues wrote. They studied 168 professionals who died of various forms of
leukemia, 48 who died of brain tumors and compared them to 265 funeral workers
who died of something else.
The people who spent more years embalming bodies or were otherwise exposed to
embalming fluid were more likely to have died from a myeloid leukemia, the
researchers found. "In recent decades, more than 2 million U.S. workers are
exposed to formaldehyde, including anatomists, pathologists, and professionals
who are employed in the funeral industry and who handle bodies or biological
specimens preserved with formaldehyde," they wrote. Their study could help
explain a known higher risk of death among these professionals, they said.
(Editing by Xavier Briand)
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http://www.reuters.com/article/healthNews/idUSTRE5AJ4TD20091120
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