Breast Cancer-Related Chemical Exposures in Firefighters
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Breast-Cancer-Relevant Exposures
2.2. Firefighter Exposures
3. Results
3.1. Articles Selected
3.2. Firefighter Chemical Exposures Identified as Breast-Cancer-Relevant
Chemical Exposure | Evidence of Breast or Mammary Carcinogenicity in Human or Rodent Studies a | Evidence of Elevated b Exposure in Firefighters or Firefighter Environment | Exposure Sources/Events |
---|---|---|---|
Acetaldehyde c | Rodent Female rats exposed to acetaldehyde had an increased incidence of benign mammary gland tumors (fibroma or fibroadenoma) [35]. Statistically significant differences in malignant mammary tumors were also observed in female rats [36,37]. Some tumors were observed in treated males [37]. | Firefighting environment Area air levels during live fire training using OSB fuel were higher than applicable ceiling levels [38]. Average air sample concentrations during fire overhaul exceeded the NIOSH “lowest feasible concentration” [39]. | Bushfire smoke [40], wildfires [41,42] and other biomass burnings [43,44] |
Structural or staged structural fires [39,45,46,47] | |||
Knockdown [45] | |||
Fire overhaul [39,45,48] | |||
Smoke from live fire trainings [49], including using OSB (oriented strand board) and pallet and straw as fuel [38] | |||
Acrylonitrile | Rodent Both inhalation and ingestion [drinking water and stomach tube] have been shown to increase the incidence of mammary gland tumors in female rats [50,51,52]. Prenatal exposure followed by postnatal inhalation also induced mammary tumors in female rats [53]. | NA | Vehicle fires [54] |
Biomass burnings [44] | |||
Benzene c | Human A large California study found a statistically significantly higher risk of the ER-/PR- breast tumor subtype with higher levels of ambient air levels of benzene [55]. A Polish study of women who worked with benzene had a non-significantly elevated risk of premenopausal breast cancer (OR: 0.84–2.80) [56], with a higher risk for those exposed 11–20 years before diagnosis. A 2012 report from the Institute of Medicine describes the association between benzene and breast cancer as suggestive, based on both epidemiologic and nonhuman data [57]. Occupational exposure to benzene was associated with increased male breast cancer in a 2018 study [58]. Rodent Oral administration caused mammary gland tumors (carcinomas and carcinosarcomas) in female mice [59,60]. Inhalation and ingestion by stomach tube increased the incidence of malignant mammary gland tumors in female rats [61,62]. | Firefighters Exhaled breath concentrations of firefighters and instructors were statistically significantly higher after live fire training compared to before (using OSB or pallet and straw as fuel) [63] and in firefighters after controlled structure [64,65] and residential fires [66] compared to pre-exposure, even when SCBA was worn. A separate study found exhaled breath concentrations of benzene after controlled-structure burns were >2-fold pre-burn levels (non-significant; small sample size) [67]; these were statistically significantly correlated with off-gassing from PPE (personal protective equipment). Median urinary concentrations of benzene metabolites increased after firefighting [68] and following smoke exposure [69]. Firefighter instructors also had statistically significantly higher benzene urinary metabolite concentrations following fire training, with some concentrations exceeding ACGIH biological exposure indices [70]. Firefighter environment Median personal air concentrations for attack, search, and overhaul firefighters working in controlled residential fires were 40, 38, and 0.9 ppm, respectively, which are well above or close to the NIOSH STEL (short-term exposure limit) of 1ppm [71]. Median personal air concentrations for firefighters and instructors exceeded applicable short-term exposure limits during training fires [38]. In a study following NY firefighters, benzene was present at 12 of 14 fires monitored, all of which exceeded the NIOSH STEL of 1 ppm [72]. In an Australian study measuring atmospheric concentrations following simulated industrial fires, benzene concentrations exceeded the Australian 8-h time-weighted average exposure standards [73], including inside structural firefighting ensembles. | Smoke from fire training structures [49], including using OSB or pallet and straw as fuel [63] |
PPE off-gassing [67,74] | |||
Structural or staged structural fires [39,45,46,47,64,70,72,73,75,76,77,78,79] and compartment fire behavior training [80] and drills [68] | |||
Vehicle fire smoke [54,72] | |||
Knockdown [45] | |||
Overhaul [39,45,48] | |||
Diesel oil fire [81] | |||
Bushfire smoke [40], wildfires [82,83,84], and biomass burnings [43,44] | |||
Smoke diving stimulators [69] | |||
1,3-butadiene c | Human Women in rubber manufacturing plants with the highest-level exposure to styrene and butadiene had non-statistically significantly higher breast cancer mortality compared to women with no exposure [85]—due to the high correlation between the two chemicals, they were not analyzed separately. This was the only study available measuring occupational exposure to butadiene [23]. Rodent Inhalation exposure caused malignant and benign mammary tumors in rats and malignant mammary tumors in female mice [86,87]. | NA | Live emergency fires and other live fire events [79,88], including municipal fires [also stimulated] [76,77], vehicle fires [54], and biomass burnings [43,44] |
Dioxins and other dioxin-like compounds (including furans but excluding dioxin-like PCBs) | Human Women with higher blood levels of 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzodioxin (TCDD) who had lived near a dioxin accident in Seveso, Italy, in 1976 had 2–3 times the risk of developing breast cancer later in life, although this was not statistically significant [89]. Another study found an increased risk of breast cancer metastasis among patients with high BMI [90]. Positive associations have also been found between TCDD exposure from municipal solid waste incinerators and invasive breast cancer risk [91] and low-dose exposures and ER+ breast cancer (indicating a possible non-monotonic dose response) [92]. Overall, few other studies have investigated cancer in women associated with TCDD exposure. IARC has classified TCDD as a human carcinogen, based on all cancer sites combined, rather than for any specific site [93]. However, much of the evidence is based on male occupational cohort studies [89,93]. Rodent Dioxins have not been demonstrated to produce mammary tumors in standard experiments in adult rodents [23] and may instead reduce mammary tumors in mice, as evidenced by TCDD. However, in a 2-year gavage study in female rats with the dioxin-like compound, 2,3,4,7,8-pentachlorodibenzofuran, there were statistically significantly increased incidences of mammary gland carcinomas for two dose groups when compared to controls; these also exceeded the historical control range. There was a trend towards to lower adjusted incidences in higher dose groups [94]. Dioxins are known to bind to the aryl hydrocarbon receptor and may contribute to breast cancer by altering mammary gland development or hormone signaling pathways [23]. | Firefighters Serum levels of several furans, including 2,3,4,7,8-pentachlorodibenzofuran, were statistically significantly higher pre- or post-controlled fire exposure compared to the general US population [95]. Serum congener levels of PCDD/Fs in Taiwanese fire scene investigators, although not firefighters, were also higher than those of the general Taiwanese population [96]. Serum levels of 1,2,3,4,6,7,8-heptaCDD (HpCDD), a dioxin congener, following structural firefighting exceeded both the US and Taiwanese general populations, although this study sample was small with only 12 participants [97]. A Russian study found statistically significantly elevated levels of HpCDD in former and current firefighters compared to non-firefighters, with chemical levels declining as the years since employed as a firefighter increased [98]. | Structural firefighting [97] including controlled residential fires [95] and simulated burns [99,100] |
Polybrominated diphenyl ether (PBDE) flame retardants | Human A study of Alaskan Native women had a non-significant increased risk of breast cancer with higher levels of PBDE-47 [101]. Adipose tissue levels of several PBDE congeners were associated with higher odds of breast cancer in Chinese women [102]; however, a California-based study found no statistically significant associations [103]. Rodent PBDEs do not seem to have been tested in rodents for mammary gland tumor induction [23,104]. However, PBDE mixtures have been shown to increase cell proliferation of estrogen-sensitive breast cancer cells [105,106] and to alter mammary gland development in rats exposure during and after gestation [107]. | Firefighters PBDE metabolites in serum were higher in firefighters compared to general US population [97,108], with one study reporting levels 2- to 3-fold higher. Levels of BDE-209 were statistically significantly higher in firefighters before and after fire exposure compared to the general population [95]. Median PBDE levels in serum were statistically significantly higher in Korean firefighters compared to the Korean general population [109]; concentrations were correlated with length of service and years dedicated to on-site dispatch work. Firefighter environment Median levels of PBDEs in fire station dust [110,111] and air [111] were elevated compared to houses and other workplaces. Using silicone wristband measurements, exposures for on-duty firefighters not responding to a fire were generally higher than for off-duty [112]. | Fire station dust [110,111] and air [111] |
Controlled residential fires [95] | |||
Used/soiled PPE [113,114,115], including off-gassing of uniforms stored in private vehicles [116] | |||
Unused PPE, including on hoods and gloves [114] | |||
Cross-contamination during PPE laundering [117] | |||
Replacement flame retardants: non-PBDE brominated flame retardants (BFRs) and organophosphorus flame retardants (OPFRs) | Rodent The BFR 2,2-bis(bromomethyl)-1,3-propanediol administered as a commercial mixture increased the incidence of mammary gland tumors in rats of both sexes [118]. A metabolite of tris (2,3-dibromopropyl) phosphate (TDBPP; an OPFR), 2,3-dibromo-1-propanol, produced mammary gland adenocarcinomas in female rats [32]. 3-monochloropropane-1,2-diol (3-MCPD), an indirect metabolite of tris(1,3-dichloro-2-propyl)phosphate, which is structurally similar to TDBPP and more commonly used today, also produced mammary tumors in female rats [33]. | BFRs—Firefighter environment Concentrations of 8 of 11 NBFRs measured were statistically significantly higher in fire station dust samples compared to residential dust samples [119], including 4 that were direct replacements for PBDEs. Using silicone wristband measurements, exposures for on-duty firefighters were generally higher than for off-duty [112]. OPFRs—Firefighters Compared to female office workers and women in NHANES, female firefighters had higher concentrations of OPFRs or their metabolites, with the greatest difference in median levels for DBuP, BDCPP, BCEP [120]. Compared to office workers, female firefighters also had higher detection frequencies [120]. Another study found median urinary metabolite concentrations, including BCPP, BDCPP, and BCEtP, to be higher in firefighters compared to the general population [121]. Several OPFR metabolites were higher post-fire compared to pre-fire [95], with DPhP increasing statistically significantly. BDCPP and DPhP were also statistically significantly higher after fire exposure when compared to the general population [95]. OPFRs—Fire station Median levels of OPFRs in fire station dust [111] and air [111] were elevated compared to houses and other workplaces. | Fire station dust [111,119] and air [111] |
Structural firefighting, including controlled residential fires [95,121] | |||
Used/soiled and unused PPE [95,115], including off-gassing of uniforms stored in private vehicles [116] | |||
Cross-contamination during PPE laundering [117] | |||
Isoprene c | Rodent In rats of both sexes, exposure by inhalation caused mammary gland fibroadenomas [50,122,123]. In male rats, exposure also caused mammary gland carcinomas [123]. | NA | Structural firefighting [124] |
Soiled PPE, including turnout jacket and gloves [124] | |||
Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances [PFASs] | Human A study that measured PFAS exposures during pregnancy found statistically significantly increased breast cancer risk (in the mothers) with higher PFOSA exposures [125]. This study found no statistically significant associations for PFOA. A more recent study reported an association between PFOS and ER+/PR+ breast cancer and between low levels of PFOA and PFOS and ER−/PR− breast cancer [126]. A study on Inuit women in Greenland reported statistically significantly elevated levels of PFOS and PFOA among breast cancer control cases, but since this population is exposed to a number of other breast-cancer-relevant chemicals, it is difficult to attribute risk to individual compounds [23,127]. The National Academies of Sciences concluded there to be limited suggestive evidence of the association between PFASs and breast cancer [128] Of six more recently published studies, four studies demonstrated an increased risk of breast cancer associated with PFASs (Supplemental Table S5). Rodent Perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) exposure alters the development of the mammary gland [129,130]. Effects on the developing mammary gland were observed at lower doses than other effects [131,132], and one rodent cancer study showed equivocal evidence of increased mammary gland tumors [133]. A study with adult rats found statistically significantly increased risk of benign mammary tumors with low doses of PFOS in the diet, but a statistically significantly decreased risk in the high-dose group [134]. | Firefighters In Finnish firefighters, serum concentrations of PFHxS and PFNA increased after three consecutive training sessions using firefighter foam [135]. Compared to office workers, firefighters had higher geometric mean concentrations of PFASs, including PFHxS, PFUnDA, PFNA [136]. Serum levels of PFDoA, PFNA, and PFSA were found to be higher in a group of US volunteer firefighters compared to the general population, with levels of PFDA and PFDoA positively associated with years of firefighting [137]. PFDA levels were found to be 3 times higher in a group of California firefighters compared to NANES adult males [138]. Firefighters—PFOA Serum levels were 2-fold higher compared to US general population levels [97]. Compared to firefighters whose turnout gear had been professionally cleaned within a year, firefighters who had not had their gear cleaned had statistically significantly higher concentrations [138]. Firefighters—PFOSA/PFOS Former firefighter employment statistically significantly correlated with higher PFOS serum concentrations [139]. Serum levels were higher in firefighters than in those who reported other employment or no employment, but only reached significance compared to the latter [140]. This study only had 37 firefighters. In a group of Australian firefighters, serum levels of PFOS were 6–10 times higher compared to the general Australian and Canadian populations [141]. Blood donation was negatively correlated to PFOS and PFOA levels, while years of a job with AFFF contact were positively associated [141]. Firefighting environment—PFOA Using silicone wristbands, statistically significantly higher concentrations were observed when firefighters were on duty and responding to a fire [112]. | Firefighting foam [135,136,138,141] |
Fire station dust [142], particularly in apparatus bays and turnout gear locker rooms | |||
Used turnout gear [142] | |||
New turnout gear, including in the outer layer, moisture barrier and thermal layers [143] | |||
Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons [PAHs] c | Human There is some evidence of increased post-menopausal breast cancer risk among women with occupational PAH exposures [144]. Women with PAH-DNA adducts and variants in genes involved in gene repair, tumor suppression, and PAH metabolism had increased risks of breast cancer [145,146,147,148,149]. A more recent study found that among women with an underlying genetic susceptibility to breast cancer, higher plasma PAH-albumin adduct levels were associated with 2–3 times greater breast cancer risk when compared to non-detectable levels [150]. Rodent Seven PAHs (benzo[a]pyrene, 3-methylcholanthrene, 7,12-dimethylbenz[a]anthracene, dibenzo[a,l]pyrene, dibenzo[a,i]pyrene, dibenzo[a,h]pyrene, dibenz[a,h]anthracene) and six nitro-PAHs (1,3-dinitropyrene, 1,8-dinitropyrene, 1-nitropyrene, 2-nitrofluorene, 4-nitropyrene, 6-nitrochrysene) increased the risk of mammary gland tumors in animal models [26]. | Firefighters Pre- vs. post-exposure: urinary metabolites Compared to pre-exposure, firefighters often had statistically significantly increased concentrations of urinary PAH metabolites after exposure to structural or controlled residential fires [66,151], wildland firefighting [152,153], on-shift fire suppression [154], and other work shifts with firefighting-related emergency calls [109,152]. One study found that OH-PAH levels were also associated with firefighters’ exposure duration, age, length of service, and years dedicated to on-site dispatch [109]. Firefighters (and/or instructors) also had higher OH-PAH levels following live fire training sessions, including at burn houses [69,155], and stimulated compartment fires [69,156,157], and using various different fuel types [63,69,157] (e.g., OSB, particleboard, and conifer plywood). Pre- vs. post-exposure: skin deposition Compared to pre-exposure, skin loadings for total PAHs were statistically significantly increased by an average of 4-fold after exposure to wood smoke [155]. PAH levels were also statistically significantly higher on the skin after emergency fire suppression [158] and smoke diving exercises [159], and on the neck following the suppression of controlled structure fires [64]. Elevated levels of benzo(a)pyrene and 3-methylcholanthrene were found on the skin (neck or hands) following a fire training exercise [160] Firefighters vs. general population or controls Many of the OH-PAHs found pre-training and pre-firefighting were above general non-smoking population medians [63,66]. A Korean study found that serum levels of PAHs were statistically significantly higher in firefighters compared to the Korean general population [109]. Pre-shift and post-shift median concentrations of OH-PAHs were also higher among wildland firefighters than among the general population [152]. Compared to control subjects, firefighters who engaged in fire combat activities had statistically significantly higher concentrations of urinary PAH metabolites (up to 340%) [161]. Firefighter environments Median personal air concentrations for firefighters and instructors exceeded applicable short-term exposure limits during training fires [38], with naphthalene being responsible for 66–68% of the total PAH concentration depending on the fuel package. Personal air concentration sampling for attack and search firefighters working in controlled residential fires found median concentrations of 23,800 and 17,800 µg/m c, respectively, which are well above the 1000 µg/m c ACGIH excursion limit for coal tar pitch volatiles [71]. Area air concentrations measured from a modern living room during a fire period have also been found to be above the ACGIH excursion limit, with 57% of total PAHs being IARC-classified as probably or possibly carcinogenic and 2% as known carcinogenic [71]. Median concentrations in fire station dust and air samples were substantially higher than those found in dust in homes [110,111]. Firefighters who responded to an active fire were exposed to statistically significantly higher concentrations of lower-molecular-weight PAHs than those who did not [162]. Using silicone wristband measurements, exposures for on-duty firefighters were generally higher than for off-duty (particularly when a fire was involved) [112], as well as for shifts with fire vs. shifts with no fire [112,163]. In an Australian study measuring air concentrations in a stimulated industrial fire, PAH concentrations inside the structural firefighting ensembles approached or exceeded the Australian 8-hr time-weighted average total PAH concentrations for a range of industrial work environments such as coke ovens and tar distillation (no standard currently exists for firefighters) [73]. | Live emergency fires [88,154,158] |
Structural or staged structural fires [39,45,46,64,66,73,75,100,151,163,164] | |||
Live fire trainings [38,49,81,155,156,157,165,166,167,168,169] and smoke diving exercises [69,159] | |||
Dust and air in fire stations [110,111,170,171] | |||
Vehicle bays and fire truck cabs [158] | |||
Fire engines (console and bodyguard) [160] | |||
Soiled PPE [73,74,113,115,158,160,162,168,172], including off-gassing of uniforms stored in private vehicles [116] | |||
incident command post [173] | |||
Overhaul [39] | |||
Knockdown [45] | |||
Overhaul [39,45,174] | |||
Wildfires, prescribed burns and other biomass burnings [42,43,44,152,163,167,175,176] | |||
Polychlorinated biphenyls [PCBs] c | Human IARC considers there to be limited evidence of the association between PCBs and breast cancer due to biological plausibility but inconsistent associations in studies [177,178]. Rodgers et al. attribute these inconsistent associations to be due to the lack of consistency in the congener types analyzed [23]. Levels of several PCB congeners found in adipose tissue were associated with higher odds of breast cancer in Chinese women [179]. Recent studies of PCB exposure and breast cancer have generally shown positive associations (Supplemental Table S3). Rodent The PCB mixture Aroclor 1254 statistically significantly increased the incidence of mammary gland fibroadenomas in female rats at the middle dose, with a non-significant increase at the low dose [178]. However, the high dose resulted in a statistically significantly decreased incidence of spontaneous mammary gland tumors [180]. Aroclor 1260 also repressed mammary gland tumor incidence [180]. The PCB metabolite 4’OH-PCB-61 increased mammary gland carcinoma incidence at the lowest administered dose in a female mouse strain known for its low incidence of mammary tumors [178,181]. Mechanistic PCBs include 209 different congeners with different biological activities: estrogenic, tumor promotion, induction of metabolizing enzymes (CYPs), oxidative damage [178]. Some PCBs also exhibit dioxin-like activity and bind to the aryl hydrocarbon receptor. | Total PCBs (TEQ and body burden) were higher in current fire firefighters compared to former or non-firefighters [98]. Current and former firefighters had statistically significantly higher levels of PCB-114, PCB-156, BCP-157, and PCB-167 compared to non-firefighters; PCB-105 and PCB-118 were nearly statistically significantly lower in non-firefighters [98]. A study by Park et al. (2015), however, reported lower median serum PCB concentrations among Californian firefighters when compared to the general US population [108]. | Dust found in fire stations [110] |
Simulated house fires [100] | |||
Soiled turnout gear [113] | |||
Styrene c | Human See epidemiological evidence from 1,3-butadiene. A more recent large longitudinal cohort of women exhibited a non-significant, suggestive association between living in an area with high air concentrations of styrene and breast cancer (both ER+ and in general) [182]. Rodent Exposure to styrene in drinking water increased the incidence of mammary fibroadenomas in female rats [183]. Inhalation studies have reported mixed findings in the same strain of rats, with one study reporting a statistically significant increase in malignant tumors and in malignant and benign tumors combined (with positive trends), and the other a dose-related decrease in adenocarcinomas [183,184]. | Exhaled breath concentrations of firefighters and instructors statistically significantly elevated after live fire training compared to before (using OSB or pallet and straw as fuel) even with SCBA worn [63]. Exhaled breath concentrations after controlled structure burns were >2-fold pre-burn levels (non-significant; small sample size) and statistically significantly correlated with off-gassing from firefighters’ used PPE [67]. Following controlled residential and training fire responses, the urinary metabolite of styrene (MADA) was statistically significantly increased in firefighters and instructors [70], with median levels during the training session exceeding the smoking general population levels. | Training fires [70], including using OSB or pallet and straw as fuel [63] |
off-gassing from used PPE [67,74] | |||
Vehicle fire smoke [54] | |||
Diesel oil fires [81] | |||
Biomass burnings [43,44] | |||
Knockdown [45] | |||
Structural fires (including stimulated) [45,46,70,73,75,76,77,79] |
4. Discussion
4.1. Limitations
4.2. Conclusions and Recommendations
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Chemical or Chemical Group | Number of Articles Including Chemical in Study | Evidence of Elevated Exposure in Firefighting | Likelihood of Breast Cancer Following Adult Exposures |
---|---|---|---|
Benzene | 43 | Strong | Probable |
Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons [PAHs] | 75 | Strong | Probable |
Acetaldehyde | 20 | Strong | Moderate |
Styrene | 24 | Strong | Moderate |
Replacement flame retardants (halogenated OPFRs and BFRs) | 9 | Strong | Presumed moderate a |
PBDE flame retardants | 13 | Strong | Limited |
Dioxins and other dioxin-like compounds | 14 | Strong | Limited |
Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances [PFASs] | 11 | Strong | Limited |
Polychlorinated biphenyls [PCBs] | 11 | Strong | Limited |
Acrylonitrile | 2 | Some | Moderate |
1,3-butadiene | 10 | Some | Moderate |
Isoprene | 5 | Some | Moderate |
Carbon tetrachloride | 1 | Inadequate evidence | NA |
1,2-Dibromoethane | 2 | Inadequate evidence | NA |
1,1-Dichloroethane | 1 | Inadequate evidence | NA |
1,1-Dichloroethylene | 1 | Inadequate evidence | NA |
1,2-Dichloroethane | 1 | Inadequate evidence | NA |
Dichloromethane | 6 | Inadequate evidence | NA |
1,2-Dichloropropane | 1 | Inadequate evidence | NA |
1,4-Dioxane | 2 | Inadequate evidence | NA |
Ethanol | 5 | Inadequate evidence | NA |
Isoeugenol | 1 | Inadequate evidence | NA |
Organochlorine pesticides | 2 | Inadequate evidence | NA |
Organophosphate pesticides | 1 | Inadequate evidence | NA |
Perchloroethylene [tetrachloroethylene/PCE] | 7 | Inadequate evidence | NA |
Toluene diisocyanates | 1 | Inadequate evidence | NA |
Trichloroethylene [TCE] | 4 | Inadequate evidence | NA |
Vinyl chloride | 1 | Inadequate evidence | NA |
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Cardona, B.; Rodgers, K.M.; Trowbridge, J.; Buren, H.; Rudel, R.A. Breast Cancer-Related Chemical Exposures in Firefighters. Toxics 2024, 12, 707. https://doi.org/10.3390/toxics12100707
Cardona B, Rodgers KM, Trowbridge J, Buren H, Rudel RA. Breast Cancer-Related Chemical Exposures in Firefighters. Toxics. 2024; 12(10):707. https://doi.org/10.3390/toxics12100707
Chicago/Turabian StyleCardona, Bethsaida, Kathryn M. Rodgers, Jessica Trowbridge, Heather Buren, and Ruthann A. Rudel. 2024. "Breast Cancer-Related Chemical Exposures in Firefighters" Toxics 12, no. 10: 707. https://doi.org/10.3390/toxics12100707
APA StyleCardona, B., Rodgers, K. M., Trowbridge, J., Buren, H., & Rudel, R. A. (2024). Breast Cancer-Related Chemical Exposures in Firefighters. Toxics, 12(10), 707. https://doi.org/10.3390/toxics12100707