1. Introduction
Nowadays, cancer is one of the main worldwide causes of death and an increasing issue in public health. The current epidemiological data and the evolutional tendency point towards an increment in its frequency, prevalence, and mortality rates happening in the next 40 years, which would comport a global pandemic with sanitary, economic, and social consequences.
The World Health Organisation (WHO) suggests the design of global strategies for the detection and treatment of patients, funding that enhances investigation and collaborative efforts for facing this disease in a more efficient and sustainable way [1].
Both databases of the WHO and the American Cancer Society offer information regarding the frequency, mortality, and survival of the 15 principal types of cancer in the world. The average risk of developing cancer for individuals aged 0 to 74 is 20.2% (22.4% for men and 18.2%). Breast cancer is the most frequent type of cancer in women (2.09 million cases worldwide), making it the main cancer-related mortality cause in women; however, it has the highest survival rate in a 5-year time band (80% - 85%), in contrast with the rate for uterine cancer (50% - 70%) and ovarian cancer (30% - 50%) [2] [3].
2. Methodology
The revision has carried out a review of Medline’s bibliography, in particular, scientific publications that looked into the relationship between woman specific cancers and work-related risk exposure. This was done using: Scielo, Scholar, Legal test, and PubMed (https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/), a free access platform with wide international coverage. Even though the limited publishing time of the publications had not been specified, priority was given to work released in the past 5 years, paying special attention to those produced from 2019 onwards. Classified magazines’ articles (editorial pieces, manuscripts, letters, reviews, clinic notes) were also included. The search was especially focused on breast cancer, uterine cancer, cervix cancer, and ovarian cancer, using the following terminology: “breast cancer and y occupational risk factor”, “uterus cancer and occupational risk factor”, “cervix cancer and occupational risk factor”, “breast cancer and workplace”, “cervix cancer and workplace”, “uterus cancer and workplace” and “gynecologic cancer and occupational medicine” (Figure 1) (Table 1).
3. Cancer in Women: Work-Related Risk Factors
In the European Union (EU) cancer it is the first work-related cause of death, comporting 53% of the annual work-related deaths. In Europe, 102,500 [4] deaths were attributed to work-related cancer in 2011, which explains the increasing concern in all countries of the EU regarding the protection of workers against the cancerous elements they are exposed to at the workplace. The European Commission suggests the modification of the Directive of the European Parliament 2004/37/CE, which is relative to the protection of employees against the risks related to their exposure to cancerous or mutagen agents during their working activities; it also limits the exposition at the workplace to thirteen newly
Table 1. Outline of the selected studies.
considered as cancerous [5].
Carrying studies on occupational risk exposure allow researchers to keep moving forwards with the identification of cancerous agents; paying special attention to the relationship between cancer and work that affects women, research studies and investigations have been carried out for decades. It is estimated that 1% of women’s cancer is attributed to the patients’ working role, but most studies do not show the changes all countries have suffered in terms of women’s participation in the working world, nor women’s different employment patterns in under-developed countries. The proportion of women with paid jobs, the types of unpaid work, the distribution of women across the different economic sectors, the scale of workplaces, the levels of exposure to risk agents allowed at the workplace, and the implementation of regular controls are some of the factors that have changed over time and that continue to change. New routes are opened for investigators of occupational cancers, widening they span to include preventive activities in under-developed countries, studies about new industries using methods to evaluate the exposure risks, and new molecular epidemiological techniques that facilitate the discovery of new cancerous agents and the identification of better control measures for their prevention [6].
Establishing relations between occupational exposure in specific working sectors and women’s cancer is a complex process. For ovarian cancer, an increment of the risk has been found for a variety of employees and sectors; nevertheless, the weight of individual risk factors [7] has frequently been overlooked: hormonal treatments for menopause-related symptoms—the IARC has associated them with an increment of the risk of developing ovarian cancer (IARC, 1999)—age, use of contraceptive methods, gender equality history, breastfeeding or family history [8] [9] [10] [11].
Although progress has been made regarding the identification of personal risk factors and the improvement of treatments for breast cancer, incidence rates keep growing. In 1996, it was suggested that, since women were already a considerable fraction of the working masses, it was worth wondering about the existence of work-related risk factors with an impact on breast cancer. The revision showed a low number of high quality occupational studies focused specifically on women and that enabled the unequivocal identification of work-related factors for this kind of neoplasms. This stressed the need of carrying out investigations that took into account risk factors unrelated to work and the exposition of chemical and physical agents that could be posteriorly related to the appearance of breast cancer, hence complementing cohort studies and investigations of specific demographic groups [12].
A series of diverse work-related risk factors have been identified as possible causes of different types of women’s cancer. One of the most studied ones has been the exposition of pesticides in industrialised countries, both due to their cancerous effect and the consequences they have on reproduction. In under-developed countries, women are increasingly exposed to pesticides, and their toxicity seems to be underestimated. Many of these pesticides’ effects will be the same for both men and women, but it is not always the case.
Some organochloride pesticides have been linked with breast cancer in post-menopausal women, but the knowledge about other pesticides is quite limited. Gender sensitive research is necessary to study the gender-environment interactions that could be related to exposure to these substances and the effects they cause on women [13].
Uterine cancer shows a clear genetic predisposition [14]; however, in 1999 the influence of work-related risk exposure on its development was already evaluated, particularly the influence of pesticides. Studies in Costa Rica showed a higher prevalence of breast cancer, uterine cancer and ovarian cancer in urban areas, whilst cervix cancer was more frequent in rural areas. Thus, hypothesis were established, linking the exposure to pesticides with specific types of cancer that act differently on men and women, and that require individualised studies [15].
The exposition to tobacco smoke on men and women has been evaluated, especially in cases of non-smoker women exposed to the smoke in a passive way, and its effect on breast cancer. A study on Chinese women found positive associations and a dose-answer relationship between post-menopausal women who are passively exposed to tobacco smoke and all subtypes of oestrogen and progesterone receptors of breast cancer. This established a significant relationship between them [16]. Tobacco smoke has also been identified as a risk factor for mucinous ovaric tumours [17] [18] but without a clear effect on its mortality rate [19]; it has also been associated with a higher risk of developing cervical adenocarcinoma [20], although it must be taken into account that the consume of tobacco is linked to other factors (immunologic, psychosocial, nutritional) that difficult the evaluation of their role in the genesis of this cancer [21].
The relationship seems clearer between breast cancer and the exposition to both oestrogenic effect hormones and oestrogen-progesterone combinations, with an increment of the risk of developing it [22]. Organochloride solvents and other substances with oestrogenic properties are considered risk factors for uterine cancer since they act as endocrine disruptors that affect the endometrium. But, despite having shown an association with endometriosis, it has not been possible to demonstrate a clear connection with cancer found in this part of the body [23] [24]. Endocrine aspects, obesity and the lack of physical activity seem to increment the risk of uterine cancer. Endocrine factors admit an increment of the risk due to treatments that use certain contraceptive medication and therapies for menopause that contain oestrogens, in isolation or associated with progesterone [25].
Some occupational expositions of chemical nature can contribute to developing cervix cancer. This happens with some dry-clean products: tetrachloroethylene [26] [27] or diverse solvents [28] [29]; they can be a risk in professional sectors such as professional and house cleaning, where a higher than average cervix cancer prevalence has been observed [30] [31]. Another of the evaluated expositions of risk is the effect of styrene-butadiene on women who work at rubber factories, linking it with several types of cancer, such as breast cancer and ovarian cancer, but with quite inconclusive results and mortality rates similar to the expected [32].
Others studies have estimated the association of breast cancer with the exposition to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, with results that suggest that a prolonged exposition increments the risk in women with antecedents of breast neoplasm in their family history [33]. The same happens in occupational exposure with certain chemical substances that can cause an endocrinal disruption: ethylene oxide, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), diverse biocides and solvents [34]. The risk is high in working sectors such as laboratory technicians and assistants, agriculture, plastic manufacturing, tinned food processing, metallurgy, motor industry, painting, foresters and wood workers, health workers, social workers and furniture makers [35] [36] [37].
Regarding ionizing radiation, whilst the exposition to high amounts is associated with a greater risk of developing breast cancer, its association with prolonged exposition to lower rates hasn’t been established. A study by the US Radiologic Technologist offers the opportunity of examining the association between low-medium doses of ionizing radiation and the incidence and mortality rates of breast cancer. Work-related radiation was associated with an increase in the risk of developing it, showing that it was higher for women born before 1930; they started working before 1950, when the annual average dose (37 mGy) was considerably higher than in later years (1.3 mGy). However, due to uncertainties and errors in the dose estimations prior to 1960, these findings must be cautiously considered [38]. Further studies suggest that ionizing radiations in the health sector are associated with the risk of developing breast cancer [39] [40].
A significant number of the studies that evaluate cervix cancer influent factors stress the limitations of their obtained results. This is due to the confusing effect that the human papillomavirus (HPV) has on it, which, being key for cancer’s development, is not normally taken into consideration for the epidemiological studies that explore its association with the work-related factors [41]. The presence of the sexually transmitted HPV is considered a requirement for the disease to develop, as well as its highest risk factor [42]. In terms of work-related exposure, a higher risk of cervix cancer in female workers has been linked to a high prevalence of the infection [43].
In the last few years, the exposure risk to cosmic radiation and circadian rhythm alterations has been highlighted in some working contexts, such as flight assistants, observing a higher risk towards certain cancers. A US-centred study evaluated the incidence of thyroid cancer, ovary cancer, and uterine cancer in 6000 female flight assistants, comparing them with the country’s general population. The results didn’t show big variations regarding the incidence of any of the 3 types, nor any evidence of higher risk. However, the low number of cancer cases that could be observed, the limited data about risk factors, and the misclassification of exposition types didn’t enable the researchers to produce clear conclusions, leaving an open field for future investigations [44]. Nevertheless, what seems to have been possible with this flight assistant collective is to establish a higher risk of breast cancer; this was showed in a revision carried out between 1995 and 2013, with incidence data, unlike mortality rates, being significantly higher. The explanation seems to lay in the alterations of the circadian rhythm produced by night shifts and the changes of time zones, which, as well as the exposure to cosmic radiation, drives the organism to develop melatonin secretion disorders. In both cases, an increased risk of developing breast cancer is detected, which supports the recommendation of particular medical supervision for flight assistants for this type of cancer, and to take into account the role of other risk factors. Amongst these factors stands out the hormonal [45] [46], since their hormonal state, their geographical origin, lifestyle, and deficit of vitamin D are shown as potential mechanisms responsible for an increase of cancer for the working collective. About breast cancer, there is a possible dose-effect association, being the risk moderately increased in the presence of longer working periods, especially in women who have been working night shifts for over 20 years. In consequence, it is recommended that preventive tracking of breast cancer is carried out with the workers, as well as the evaluation of the benefit of melatonin supplements [47].
Breast cancer has probably been the most studied cancer regarding its relationships with working exposure. Epidemiologic studies indicate that physical activity reduces the risk of developing it, and it has recently been suggested that sedentary behaviour could be considered as a risk factor that acts independently from the level of physical activity. In 2017, a study evaluated working activities by classifying them into sedentary, mixed, and non-sedentary. Occupational sedentarism was associated with a greater risk of breast cancer, especially in women under the age of 55. This factor can be modified by planning breaks during the daily working schedule, although it hasn’t been confirmed whether this measure can have significant risk reduction in the medium and long term [48].
4. Cancer in Women: Risk Factors outside Work
There are other risk factors, such as metabolic risks, are not directly linked with the working environment, but that workspaces can help prevent through health campaigns, especially obesity. The latest is linked to an increment in the prevalence and incidence of some types of cancer. It is considered a risk factor for endometrial cancer, although it isn’t clear if the metabolic syndrome contributes to a greater extent than obesity. Some authors state that metabolic syndrome doubles the risk of endometrial cancer and women with hypoglycaemia, dyslipidaemia, and hypertension have double chances of developing it. Elevated glucose levels, the increment of waist measures, and the body fat index are also associated with an incremented risk, which supports the need of tracking and controlling the development of the metabolic syndrome as a possible endometrial cancer risk predictor, independently of obesity amongst women [49].
In addition to considering work-related risk factors for the prevention of cancer in women, it is also necessary to take into account that gynaecological cancers, especially breast cancer, are amongst the most frequent ones when it comes to working women. It is highly important to act in a preventive way, facilitating their return to work and investigating the characteristics that have an influence on their reincorporation after treatment. Some authors point out that, in some countries like Japan, when the work doesn’t have a regular time schedule, it is more probable that it will affect negatively the return and the adaptation to changes after undergoing treatment for gynaecological cancer [50]. It is a growing issue, and both cancer and its treatment have an impact on the employees’ ability to carry out their tasks, something that varies depending on the therapy received. Business policies that improve communication and work-related adaptations facilitate the return-to-work process. In the United States, it is expected that as cancer detection and treatment options improve, so will the number of cancer survivors, which stresses the importance of knowing the effects of the disease on their daily work activities. Some authors show that women who have undergone radiotherapy have higher chances of having limitations in their physical activities, whilst those who received chemotherapy see limitations in analytic activities. Only 29% of women feel that their return to work is being facilitated [51].
Preventive action is gaining importance and it can be of greater effectiveness when cooperating with Occupational and Public Health, particularly regarding uterine cancer, one of the most common types and whose early diagnosis and effective treatment are possible thanks to smear tests (Papanicolaou). Information is vital for preventing this kind of cancer and it implies improving preventive knowledge and behaviours as shown by a 2019 Turkish study about HPV, uterine cancer, and the Papanicolau test. The results highlight the insufficient knowledge there is currently across different professional and cultural fields (nurses, doctors, teachers, university staff, police officers and housekeepers) and which hinders any preventive activity. It is highlighted the weight of cultural and social factors since women who have higher levels of education, higher income and who live in urban areas have better knowledge about HPV, its vaccine, the Papanicolau test and uterine cancer. However, it stands out the fact that nurses are the ones who underwent the lowest number of gynaecological examinations; on the contrary, doctors are the ones who underwent the highest number of Papanicolau test. The scale for uterine cancer early diagnosis showed health workers at the highest end, and police officers at the lowest [52]. A decade earlier, nurses from the occidental regions of Turkey had been the subject for a study that aimed to evaluate their knowledge and attitudes towards uterine cancer. All participants considered that their knowledge was adequate, and the researchers didn’t find any significant difference regarding their age, marital status nor years of experience [53]. Despite their good knowledge and attitude levels towards the Papanicolau test, the results showed that a low number of them had undergone it, with the main reason for it being the absence of cancer-associated symptoms. It is recommended to improve the acceptance of this test, even amongst health workers, and the working place is an ideal space for doing it through training, informative campaigns and coordinated activities with health professionals [54].
Without a doubt, genetic factors are relevant in this type of cancer, but exposure in the working space must be taken into account as part of the necessary research to establish cause-effect associations.
Epidemiological studies focused on specific professional collectives have observed a higher incidence rate or death risk by breast cancer amongst teachers, nurses and doctors, management positions, beauticians and hairdressers, chemists, telephonists and pharmacy workers. Some studies indicate that the incidence rate may hold an association with work-related exposure to electromagnetic fields, ionizing radiation, organic solvents, pesticides and low physical activity levels. Nevertheless, due to inconsistencies in the results and methodological deficiencies, it has not yet been possible to make decisive conclusions about their relationship [55].
5. Women Work-Related Cancer in Spain
In Spain, work-related cancer has generated very few cases of temporary incapacitation (TI)—although these have been of long duration, scarce proposals of permanent incapacitation (PI) and their notification as occupational illness (OI) in the CEPROSS database continues to be low (Table 2). Notification of cancer as OC has only slightly changed in the past decade (Figure 2) regarding both cancer types included under the official policies (Real Decreto 1299/2006, de Enfermedades profesionales) [56] (Table 3) and those which aren’t. When there is a possible cause-effect association between a work-related exposure risk and the development of a neoplasm, but it cannot be classified as an OP—it will be notified as a work-related accident in the PANOTRASS database. The lack of notification of these cases affects both men and women, but it is especially alarming regarding women specific cancers, uterine, cervix, breast and ovarian
Table 2. Cancer as an occupational disease in Spain (group 6 of the RD).
Reference: http://www.seg-social.es/wps/portal/wss/internet/EstadisticasPresupuestosEstudios/Estadisticas/EST231.
Figure 2. Evolution of the notification of cancer as an occupational diseases in Spain (2007-20019).
cancers, since none of them, is included in the above-mentioned official regulation document.
Another document to be noted due to its interesting approach is the National Occupational Security and Health Institute (INSST) document about cancer-related mortality [57] and, more specifically, about gynaecological cancers, occupational risks, and work-related risk exposures (Table 4).
Regarding breast cancer, it is the most frequent type in Spain amongst female workers, as well as their top cause of death. Studies carried out in the working space specify risk factors, the determination of contingency, the criteria for their return-to-work evaluation, the criteria for incapacitation and disability assessments, and the costs of work absence periods [58] [59] [60] [61] [62]. Nevertheless, the absence of positive associations between breast cancer mortality rates and the specific professions clashes against the scientific evidence, since positive associations have already been found between the work-related exposure to different substances and breast cancer in women.
For uterine cancer, the highest mortality rate is found amongst workers in some construction-related activities, and it coincides with previous research results [63], although it is the hospitality waitresses collective the one that shows the highest risk [64] [65]. About cervix cancer, there are differences in the level of risk between countries and even inside each health attention area, both in terms of prevalence and survival. The key seems to be related to socioeconomic inequalities, which opens new opportunities to studies and research that gather information about these cultural, economic, and social aspects [66] [67].
There are very few published studied that connect uterine cancer with the working scene. A higher risk has been found on teachers, retail workers, and security personnel. In Spain, work carried out by the INSST shows a higher mortality risk by uterine cancer on retail workers, painters, fisherwomen, machinery operators, electricians, and lawyers, matching the results of previous studies, such as that of Wernli et al. of 2008. The same cannot be said about ovarian cancer, for which INSST hasn’t found in Spain a clear association between this type of cancer and specific occupations and economic sectors. Other international studies states hairdressers as working collective with the highest risk [68] [69] [70]. According to the IARC, the evidence that shows an association between that profession and ovarian cancer is limited and it is related to the exposure to
Table 3. Cancer and Work in Spain. Exposure risks.
*Cancer report included in Royal Decree 1299/2006, of November 10, which approves the table of occupational diseases in the Social Security system and establishes criteria for their notification and registration. Spanish Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs “BOE” no. 302, of December 19, 2006 Reference: BOE-A-2006-22169.
Table 4. Cancer and work in Spain. Mortality risk.
Reference: Spanish National Institute of Safety and Health at Work; 2019.
different kinds of dies (amines, aromatics, aminophenol), solvents, propellant substances, and aerosols. Ovarian cancer seems to be connected with dry cleaning activities, printing, and graphic arts, agriculture or the pharmaceutical industry, as well as with other specific occupations such as nursing or teaching. It has also been found a possible relationship with the exposure to combustion-derived fumes, solvents, and silica powders [71] - [78]. The IARC highlights asbestos in its multiple forms as the only work-related exposure agent to which there is enough evidence for establishing an association [79].
From this revision it can be highlighted that the data is not conclusive enough to draw a clear association between these types of cancer that affect women and their relationship with the working field, although the evidence is continuously becoming clearer and lead the way to the future investigation; this is particularly important in our days, at a moment when cancer is still a disease that affects all countries and which incidence and prevalence keeps growing, with sanitary, economic and social implications.
Occupational cancer is the least notified OP in Spain and its surrounding countries, and it requires multidisciplinary and collaborative measures in order to be tackled and approximate real data about it.
For studying work-related cancer in women it is crucial to have a gender view that allows the encouragement of preventive activities, anticipating the action to the possible damage, and to facilitate a return to work process without as many risks as possible after surviving the disease.
Good health at work has a very important role in this, and occupational health as a preventive health specialty enables professionals to collaborate from all related competencies: health promotion, risk prevention, specific health screening, formation, training, specialised information, and investigation focused on the working field and, in this case, women.
The present research has not received any funding from agencies related to neither the public, commercial nor non-profit sectors.