Litcius/Paper detail

Chest x‐ray has low sensitivity to detect silicosis in artificial stone benchtop industry workers

Ryan Hoy, C. Jones, Katrina Newbigin, Michael J. Abramson, Hayley Barnes, Christina Dimitriadis, Samantha Ellis, Deborah C. Glass, Stella May Gwini, Fiona Hore‐Lacy, Javier Jiménez-Martín, Sundeep S. Pasricha, Janu Pirakalathanan, Miranda Siemienowicz, Karen Walker‐Bone, Malcolm Sim

2024Respirology11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: Chest x-ray (CXR) remains a core component of health monitoring guidelines for workers at risk of exposure to crystalline silica. There has however been a lack of evidence regarding the sensitivity of CXR to detect silicosis in artificial stone benchtop industry workers. METHODS: Paired CXR and high-resolution computed tomography (HRCT) images were acquired from 110 artificial stone benchtop industry workers. Blinded to the clinical diagnosis, each CXR and HRCT was independently read by two thoracic radiologists from a panel of seven, in accordance with International Labour Office (ILO) methodology for CXR and International Classification of HRCT for Occupational and Environmental Respiratory Diseases. Accuracy of screening positive (ILO major category 1, 2 or 3) and negative (ILO major category 0) CXRs were compared with identification of radiological features of silicosis on HRCT. RESULTS: CXR was positive for silicosis in 27/110 (24.5%) workers and HRCT in 40/110 (36.4%). Of the 83 with a negative CXR (ILO category 0), 15 (18.1%) had silicosis on HRCT. All 11 workers with ILO category 2 or 3 CXRs had silicosis on HRCT. In 99 workers ILO category 0 or 1 CXRs, the sensitivity of screening positive CXR compared to silicosis identified by HRCT was 48% (95%CI 29-68) and specificity 97% (90-100). CONCLUSION: Compared to HRCT, sensitivity of CXR was low but specificity was high. Reliance on CXR for health monitoring would provide false reassurance for many workers, delay management and underestimate the prevalence of silicosis in the artificial stone benchtop industry.

Topics & Concepts

SilicosisMedicineRadiologyRadiological weaponOccupational lung diseasePneumoconiosisOccupational exposureEnvironmental healthPathologyOccupational and environmental lung diseasesSilicon Effects in AgricultureAluminum toxicity and tolerance in plants and animals
Chest x‐ray has low sensitivity to detect silicosis in artificial stone benchtop industry workers | Litcius