The Epidemiological Surveillance of Mesothelioma Mortality in Italy as a Tool for the Prevention of Asbestos Exposure

Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2023 May 25;20(11):5957. doi: 10.3390/ijerph20115957.

Abstract

As part of a surveillance plan active since the early 1990s, this study evaluates malignant mesothelioma (MM) mortality for the time-window 2010-2019 in Italy, a country that banned asbestos in 1992. National and regional mortality rates for MM, and municipal standardized mortality ratios (all mesotheliomas, pleural (MPM) and peritoneal (MPeM)), by gender and age group were calculated. A municipal clustering analysis was also performed. There were 15,446 deaths from MM (11,161 males, 3.8 × 100,000; 4285 females, 1.1 × 100,000), of which 12,496 were MPM and 661 were MPeM. In the study period, 266 people ≤50 years died from MM. A slightly decreasing rate among males since 2014 was observed. The areas at major risk hosted asbestos-cement plants, asbestos mines (chrysotile in Balangero), shipyards, petrochemical and chemical plants, and refineries. Female mortality excesses particularly were found in municipalities with a fluoro-edenite-contaminated mine (Biancavilla) and textile facilities. Excesses were also found in a region with the presence of natural asbestos fibres and in males living in two small islands. The Italian National Prevention Plan stated recommendations to eliminate asbestos exposures and to implement health surveillance and healthcare for people exposed to asbestos.

Keywords: asbestos; childhood exposure; environmental exposure; malignant mesothelioma; mortality; occupational exposure.

MeSH terms

  • Asbestos*
  • Asbestos, Amphibole
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Italy / epidemiology
  • Male
  • Mesothelioma* / epidemiology
  • Mesothelioma, Malignant*
  • Occupational Exposure*

Substances

  • Asbestos
  • Asbestos, Amphibole

Grants and funding

This research received no external funding.