12 Cancer Causing Substances
12 Cancer Causing Substances
Health Warnings
Below, you'll find a list of twelve cancer-causing agents that affect the highest
numbers of Canadian workers:
Crystalline silica
Associated cancers:
Lung cancer
What is it?
Crystalline silica is a component of soil, sand, and rocks (like granite and quartzite).
Only quartz and cristobalite silica that can be inhaled as particles are designated
known carcinogens.
Where is it found?
Mode(s) of exposure:
Inhalation
Benzene
Associated cancers:
Where is it found?
Mode(s) of exposure:
Taxi drivers, truckers, couriers, auto shop workers (due to lengthy exposure to
vehicle exhaust or traffic congestion), those dealing with petrochemicals such as
gas-station employees or oil-refinery workers, firefighters, lab technicians, and
workers involved in making coal or coke chemicals, rubber tires, steel, and plastics.
Wood dust
Associated cancers:
What is it?
Where is it found?
Mode(s) of exposure:
Inhalation
Those in the construction industry, and to some extent, those in the logging
industry. Specific occupational settings that typically involve significant exposure
include furniture/cabinetry shops, timber mills, window/door manufacturers, joinery
shops, wooden boat manufacturers, and pulp and paper manufacturers.
Artificial UV radiation
Associated cancers:
Skin cancer
What is it?
Artificial UV radiation comes from man-made machines like sunbeds, medical and
dental technology, and various lamps.
Where is it found?
Mode(s) of exposure:
Skin exposure
UV-emitting tanning beds, dental offices where UV radiation is utilized for cavity
restoration, fissure sealing, etc., and commercial/industrial machinery repair and
fabricated metal products manufacturers (where welding takes place).
Asbestos
Associated cancers:
What is it?
Where is it found?
Chromium (hexavalent)
Associated cancers:
Lung cancer
What is it?
Where is it found?
Used in small amounts in printer ink toners, textile dyes, and during water
treatment.
Mode(s) of exposure:
Welders while welding stainless steel, printing machine and press operators,
machinists, and pipefitters.
Associated cancers:
What is it?
Used to make stainless steel, and also found in magnets, electrical contacts,
batteries, spark plugs, and surgical/dental prostheses.
Mode(s) of exposure:
Formaldehyde
Associated cancers:
What is it?
Where is it found?
Mode(s) of exposure:
Embalmers, pathology lab operators, wood and paper product workers, and health
care professionals (nurses, dentists) exposed during use of medicinal products that
contain formaldehyde. Also at risk are painters, manual labourers, product
assemblers, foundry workers, and those who teach in cadaver laboratories.
Associated cancers:
Thyroid, breast, and blood-borne cancers
What is it?
Includes particles and rays emitted by radioactive materials, nuclear reactions, and
radiation-producing machines.
Where is it found?
X-rays, radiotherapy.
Mode(s) of exposure:
Those who work around x-ray machines (such as radiation technicians, nurses, and
some chiropractors), nuclear power technicians, uranium miners, airline crews, and
astronauts.
Cadmium
Associated cancers:
Lung cancer
What is it?
Where is it found?
Zinc deposits.
Battery production.
Mode(s) of exposure:
Inhalation, ingestion
Associated cancers:
Leukemia (Yes, this is correct - these chemicals that are used in conventional
medical care to "treat" malignancies can actually contribute to the formation of
leukemia.)
What is it?
Where is it found?
Mode(s) of exposure:
Nurses, hospital laundry workers, and pharmacy technicians and pharmacists who
prepare chemotherapeutic drugs for cancer patients.
Arsenic
Associated cancers:
What is it?
Where is it found?
Mode(s) of exposure: