The activity of urinary N‐acetylamino‐transferase was determined by high‐performance liquid chro‐matographic assay of acetylisoniazid and isoniazid after administration of isoniazid to healthy Japanese male and bladder cancer patients in Japan. The healthy subjects were 47 college students and 44 company employees ranging from 18 to 64 years old (mean±SD=34.5±13.7). The bladder cancer group consisted of 58 male and 13 female patients, ranging from 28 to 82 years old (mean±SD =60.8 ±11.6), who were being treated at several hospitals. The slow phenotype, defined as an acetylation ratio (acetylisoniazid/isoniazid) of less than 2.0, was observed in 13 (14.3%) of the 91 healthy subjects, and in 20 (28.2%) of the 71 bladder cancer patients; the difference between the two groups is significant (P < 0.05). A histogram of the acetylation ratio values showed an overall leftward shift of the patient group, indicating low values of acetylation ratio in this group as a whole (P < 0.01).
By examining historical documents regarding occupational bladder cancer in Japan, we interpreted and followed the progress made in developing preventive measures against the outbreak of occupational bladder cancer in Japanese dye industries after World War II, and documented how these measures became well organized. During Dr. M. H. C. Williams's, who was an industrial physician for the British ICI Company, occasional visits to Japan, he encouraged the enforcement of such measures, considering them to be as important in occupational health in Japan as in Western countries. He received permission to implement these measures in Japanese dye companies. A urine cell diagnostic system was already being employed in Japanese industries as a method of diagnosing occupational bladder cancer, and its use was promoted by engineers, urologists, and pathologists even before the Industrial Safety and Health Law was enacted in 1972. It took about 10 years for these measures to become standardized industry-wide. The use of these measures has had a considerable effect on the early diagnosis of patients and extended patients' life spans. Eventually, the life spans of such patients became approximately the same as that of the average Japanese male. Some patients unfortunately died of occupational bladder cancer. Others were examined using these measures not only while employed but also after retirement. Therefore, some patients in whom occupational bladder cancer was detected are still alive at over eighty years of age.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.