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Featured researches published by Lucia Fazzo.


Occupational and Environmental Medicine | 2009

Cancer mortality and congenital anomalies in a region of italy with intense environmental pressure due to waste

Marco Martuzzi; Francesco Mitis; Fabrizio Bianchi; Fabrizio Minichilli; Pietro Comba; Lucia Fazzo

Objectives: Waste management in the Campania region has been characterised, since the 1980s, by widespread uncontrolled and illegal practices of waste dumping, generating concerns over the health implications. The objective of this study was to evaluate possible adverse health effects of such environmental pressure. Methods: The health effects of waste-related environmental exposures in Campania were assessed in a correlation study on nine causes of death (for the years 1994–2001) and 12 types of congenital anomaly (CA) (1996–2002) in 196 municipalities of the provinces of Naples and Caserta. Poisson regression was used to analyse the association between health outcomes and environmental contamination due to waste, as measured through a composite index, adjusting for deprivation. Results: Statistically significant excess relative risks (ERR, %) in high-index compared with low-index (unexposed) municipalities were found for all-cause mortality (9.2 (95% CI 6.5 to 11.9) in men and 12.4 (9.5 to 15.4) in women and liver cancer (19.3 (1.4 to 40.3) in men and 29.1 (7.6 to 54.8) in women). Increased risks were also found for all cancer mortality (both sexes), stomach and lung cancer (in men). Statistically significant ERRs were found for CAs of the internal urogenital system (82.7 (25.6 to 155.7)) and of the central nervous system (83.5 (24.7 to 169.9)). Conclusion: Although the causal nature of the association is uncertain, findings support the hypothesis that waste-related environmental exposures in Campania produce increased risks of mortality and, to a lesser extent, CAs.


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2006

Cancer Mortality in an Area of Campania (Italy) Characterized by Multiple Toxic Dumping Sites

Pietro Comba; Fabrizio Bianchi; Lucia Fazzo; Lucia Martina; Massimo Menegozzo; Fabrizio Minichilli; Francesco Mitis; Loredana Musmeci; Renato Pizzuti; Michele Santoro; Stefania Trinca; Marco Martuzzi

Abstract:  Several recent studies have documented that a widespread practice of dumping toxic wastes has taken place for many years in the Provinces of Naples and Caserta. Extensive programs of environmental monitoring are currently ongoing in the area. In this frame, the Department of Civil Defence of the Italian Government has appointed an ad hoc study group in order to assess the health status of the population resident in the area of interest. The first investigation performed by the study group has been a geographic study on cancer mortality and occurrence of malformations in 196 municipalities constituting the two Provinces. The study detected an area located in the southeastern part of the Province of Caserta and in the northwestern part of the Province of Naples, where cancer mortality and congenital malformations show significantly increased rates with respect to expected figures derived from the regional population. The area highlighted by the study is, in general terms, overlapping with the area where most illegal dumping of toxic wastes took place. It is now recommended that mortality studies be extended to take into account other health outcomes, to search for correlations with environmental exposures, and consider possible confounding factors.


American Journal of Industrial Medicine | 2012

Pleural mesothelioma mortality and asbestos exposure mapping in Italy

Lucia Fazzo; Marco De Santis; Giada Minelli; Caterina Bruno; Amerigo Zona; Alessandro Marinaccio; Susanna Conti; Pietro Comba

BACKGROUND An epidemic of asbestos-related diseases is ongoing worldwide. Mortality from malignant pleural neoplasms in Italy was analyzed, to estimate the health impact of asbestos at national and local level. METHODS Mortality from ICD-9 code 163 was considered, in the time-window 1995-2002, using National Bureau of Statistics data. National and regional standardized rates and municipal Standardized Mortality Ratios (SMR) were calculated. Municipal clusters were identified by applying Spatial Scan Statistics procedure. Relative risks (RR) express the ratio of risk within the cluster to the risk outside the cluster. RESULTS The national standardized annual mortality rate was 1.9 per 100,000. Significant clusters corresponded to asbestos-cement industries (Casale Monferrato: RR = 11.63), shipyards (Monfalcone, RR = 7.43), oil refineries (Falconara, RR = 2.52), petrochemical industries (Priolo, RR = 3.81). CONCLUSIONS The present study confirms malignant pleural neoplasms mortality as a suitable indicator of asbestos exposure at geographic level. In addition to asbestos-cement industries and shipyards, other industrial settings are associated with pleural neoplasm mortality.


Annali dell'Istituto Superiore di Sanità | 2011

Ecological studies of cancer incidence in an area interested by dumping waste sites in Campania (Italy)

Lucia Fazzo; Marco De Santis; Francesco Mitis; Marta Benedetti; Marco Martuzzi; Pietro Comba; Mario Fusco

Cancer incidence was investigated in an area which has been affected by the illegal practices of dumping hazardous waste and setting fire to mismanaged waste. For the 35 municipalities of this area that are served by a Cancer Registry, municipal standardized incidence ratios (SIR) and hierarchical Bayesian estimators (BIR) were computed. Moreover, municipal spatial clustering and a Poisson regression by municipality index of waste-related exposure were performed for 10 cancer types. Increased municipality SIRs were found for some cancer types. The BIRs confirmed the increases for liver cancer in two municipalities. Statistically significant clusters were detected for liver, lung, leukaemia and soft tissue sarcomas. In the regression analysis, testis cancer showed significant trend with the index of waste-related exposure (RR = 1.18).


Annali dell'Istituto Superiore di Sanità | 2014

Incidence of pleural mesothelioma in a community exposed to fibres with fluoro-edenitic composition in Biancavilla (Sicily, Italy)

Caterina Bruno; Rosario Tumino; Lucia Fazzo; Giuseppe Cascone; Achille Cernigliaro; Marco De Santis; Maria Concetta Giurdanella; Carmela Nicita; Patrizia Concetta Rollo; Salvatore Scondotto; Eugenia Spata; Amerigo Zona; Pietro Comba

INTRODUCTION Amphibolic fibres with fluoro-edenitic composition characterize Biancavilla soil, including the major quarry from which building materials have been extensively extracted. These fibres induce mesothelioma in experimental animals and their in vitro biological action is similar to that of crocidolite. MATERIALS AND METHODS Malignant mesothelioma case series and incidence were examined to evaluate the disease burden on Biancavilla inhabitants. RESULTS The incidence of pleural mesothelioma in Biancavilla is steadily higher than in the Sicilian Region, risk estimates are more elevated in women than in men, the most affected age class is constituted by subjects aged less than 50. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS Environmental exposure to fibres with fluoro-edenitic composition appears to be causally related to the elevated mesothelioma occurrence in Biancavilla. In this frame, environmental clean-up is the main goal to be pursued in public health terms. A contribution of scientific research to public health decision making with respect to priority setting for environmental clean-up can derive from some further selected epidemiological investigations.


Annali dell'Istituto Superiore di Sanità | 2014

Cancer incidence in Italian contaminated sites

Pietro Comba; Paolo Ricci; Ivano Iavarone; Roberta Pirastu; Carlotta Buzzoni; Mario Fusco; Stefano Ferretti; Lucia Fazzo; Roberto Pasetto; Amerigo Zona; Emanuele Crocetti

INTRODUCTION The incidence of cancer among residents in sites contaminated by pollutants with a possible health impact is not adequately studied. In Italy, SENTIERI Project (Epidemiological study of residents in National Priority Contaminated Sites, NPCSs) was implemented to study major health outcomes for residents in 44 NPCSs. METHODS The Italian Association of Cancer Registries (AIRTUM) records cancer incidence in 23 NPCSs. For each NPCSs, the incidence of all malignant cancers combined and 35 cancer sites (coded according to ICD-10), was analysed (1996-2005). The observed cases were compared to the expected based on age (5-year period,18 classes), gender, calendar period (1996-2000; 2001-2005), geographical area (North-Centre and Centre-South) and cancer sites specific rates. Standardized Incidence Ratios (SIR) with 90% Confidence Intervals were computed. RESULTS In both genders an excess was observed for overall cancer incidence (9% in men and 7% in women) as well as for specific cancer sites (colon and rectum, liver, gallblad-der, pancreas, lung, skin melanoma, bladder and Non Hodgkin lymphoma). Deficits were observed for gastric cancer in both genders, chronic lymphoid leukemia (men), malignant thyroid neoplasms, corpus uteri and connective and soft-tissue tumours and sarcomas (women). DISCUSSION This report is, to our knowledge, the first one on cancer risk of residents in NPCSs. The study, although not aiming to estimate the cancer burden attributable to the environment as compared to occupation or life-style, supports the credibility of an etiologic role of environmental exposures in contaminated sites. Ongoing analyses focus on the interpretation of risk factors for excesses of specific cancer types overall and in specific NPCSs in relation to the presence of carcinogenic pollutants.


Annali dell'Istituto Superiore di Sanità | 2014

Mesothelioma incidence in the neighbourhood of an asbestos-cement plant located in a national priority contaminated site

Lucia Fazzo; Simona Menegozzo; Maria Eleonora Soggiu; Marco De Santis; Michele Santoro; Valentina Cozza; Amelia Brangi; Massimo Menegozzo; Pietro Comba

BACKGROUND An epidemic of asbestos-related disease is ongoing in most industrialized countries, mainly attributable to past occupational exposure but partly due to environmental exposure. In this perspective, the incidence of pleural mesothelioma close to a former asbestos-cement plant in a national contaminated site was estimated. METHODS The census-tracts interested by atmospheric dispersion of facilities in the contaminated site were identified. Two subareas with different estimated environmental asbestos impact were distinguished. An ecological study at micro-geographic level was performed. The standardized incidence ratios (SIR) for study area and the two subareas, in comparison with region and municipality were computed. The standardized incidence rate ratio (IRR) between the two subareas was computed. RESULTS Mesothelioma incidence in the study area was increased: 46 cases were observed with respect to 22.23 expected (SIR: 2.02). The increase was confirmed in analysis considering only the subjects without an occupationally exposure to asbestos: 19 cases among men (SIR = 2.48; 95% CI: 1.49-3.88); 11 case among women (SIR = 1.34; 95% CI: 0.67-2.40). The IRR between the two subareas is less than one in overall population considering all age-classes and of 3 fold (IRR = 3.14, 95% CI: 0.65-9.17) in the age-classes below 55 years. CONCLUSIONS The findings indicate an increased incidence of pleural mesothelioma in the neighbourhood of asbestos-cement plant, and a possible etiological contribution of asbestos environmental exposure in detected risks.


Geospatial Health | 2016

Cancer incidence in Priolo, Sicily: a spatial approach for estimation of industrial air pollution impact

Lucia Fazzo; Mario Carere; Francesco Tisano; Caterina Bruno; Achille Cernigliaro; Maria Rita Cicero; Pietro Comba; Maria Luisa Contrino; Marco De Santis; Fabrizio Falleni; Vincenzo Ingallinella; Anselmo Madeddu; Ida Marcello; Carlo Regalbuto; Giovanna Sciacca; Maria Eleonora Soggiu; Amerigo Zona

The territory around the industrial Sicilian area of Priolo, Italy, has been defined as a contaminated site (CS) of national priority for remediation because of diffuse environmental contamination caused by large industrial settlements. The present study investigates the spatial distribution of cancer into the CS territory (period 1999-2006). Different geographical methods used for the evaluation of the impact of industrial air pollutants were adopted. Using the database of Syracuse Province Cancer Registry, gender-specific standardised incidence ratios were calculated for 35 tumour sites for the CS overall and for each municipality included in the CS. A cluster analysis for 17 selected neoplasms was performed at micro-geographical level. The identification of the priority index contaminants (PICs) present in environmental matrices and a review of their carcinogenicity have been performed and applied in the interpretation of the findings. The area has a higher cancer incidence with respect to the provincial population, in particular excess is registered among both genders of lung, bladder and breast cancers as well as skin melanoma and pleural mesothelioma and there is an a priori evidence of association with the exposure to PICs. The study highlights the need to provide different approaches in CSs where several exposure pathways might be relevant for the population. The presence of potential sources of asbestos exposure deserves specific concern.


Archives of Environmental & Occupational Health | 2015

Incidence of Soft Tissue Sarcomas in an Italian Area Affected by Illegal Waste Dumping Sites

Marta Benedetti; Lucia Fazzo; Carlotta Buzzoni; Pietro Comba; Corrado Magnani; Mario Fusco

The aim of the present study was to investigate the possible association between occurrence of soft tissue sarcomas (STS) and residence in an Italian area affected by illegal practices of dumping and setting fire to both hazardous and solid urban wastes. Standardized incidence ratios (SIRs) were computed separately for STS and some specific STS subtypes. The analysis was performed for the total population and for specific age groups, namely, children, adolescents, and adults. In adults, no significant increase in STS was found other than for gastrointestinal stromal tumors in males. A nonsignificant increase in incidence of STS was observed for male children and female adolescents. The results of the present study do not allow conclusions for a causal association. In the absence of previous epidemiological studies on this issue, further investigations are needed.


Environment International | 2018

Plasma levels of polychlorinated biphenyls and risk of cutaneous malignant melanoma: A hospital-based case-control study

Michele Magoni; Pietro Apostoli; Francesco Donato; Ausilia Maria Manganoni; Pietro Comba; Lucia Fazzo; Fabrizio Speziani; Lucia Leonardi; Grazia Orizio; Carmelo Scarcella; Piergiacomo Calzavara Pinton

Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCB) have been classified by the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) in Group 1 as carcinogenic to human, based on sufficient evidence in humans of an increased risk of cutaneous malignant melanoma (CMM), however few studies have been done in the general population. This study examined the relationship between PCB plasma levels and risk of CMM adjusting for sun sensitivity and sun exposure in a province of Northern Italy (Brescia), where a chemical factory produced PCBs from 1938 to 1984 causing human contamination. A case-control study of 205 CMM patients and 205 control subjects was conducted. Cases and controls were assayed for plasma levels of 33 PCB congeners. No associations was found between risk of CMM and plasma levels of total PCB (OR = 0.81; 95% CI: 0.34-1.96 for highest vs lowest quartile) or specific congeners. The study confirmed the association with light skin colour (OR = 3.00; 95% CI: 1.91-4.73), cumulative lifetime UV exposure (OR = 2.56; 95% CI: 1.35-4.85) and high level of education (OR = 1.45; 95% CI: 1.03-2.05). This case-control study does not support the hypothesis of an association between current plasma levels of PCBs and CMM development in the general population.

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Pietro Comba

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Amerigo Zona

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Caterina Bruno

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Roberta Pirastu

Sapienza University of Rome

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Roberto Pasetto

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Ivano Iavarone

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Marco De Santis

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Susanna Conti

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Marco Martuzzi

World Health Organization

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