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Jones Act: Non-Hodgkin lymphoma claims

Jones Act: Non-Hodgkin lymphoma claims video

The damage benzene inflicts on the body is not limited to the bone marrow. Prolonged occupational exposure undermines the immune system and the lymphatic cells that form its foundation, paving the way for non-Hodgkin lymphoma to gain a foothold. The International Agency for Research on Cancer reports positive associations between benzene and NHL in several occupational studies in addition to its known causal relationship with leukemia.

Claim Application

How benzene exposure leads to non-Hodgkin lymphoma

Benzene exposure causes non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) by attacking the lymphocytes, the white blood cells that form the core of the immune system. Benzene reaches these cells through two overlapping routes. 

First, it is taken up in the bone marrow, where lymphocytes are made, where it damages blood-forming stem cells and disrupts normal immune cell development. Second, benzene metabolites cause DNA strand breaks and chromosomal abnormalities directly in lymphoid cells, allowing mutations to accumulate until normal growth regulation fails.

A large pooled analysis published in Environmental Health Perspectives found that higher cumulative benzene exposure was associated with increased risk of NHL and other lymphoid malignancies. Additional occupational studies across petroleum, chemical, and industrial cohorts reported elevated NHL incidence with clear exposure-response trends in higher cumulative exposure groups.

What distinguishes NHL from leukemia cases is the immune system dimension. Beyond direct DNA damage, benzene suppresses immune function and causes chronic disruption of lymphatic cell regulation, a sustained biological environment that raises lymphoma risk independently of genetic injury alone.

Maritime workers accumulate benzene exposure through fuel vapor inhalation, petroleum cargo handling, tank cleaning, engine room operations, and work in poorly ventilated enclosed spaces over the course of an entire career at sea.

Your diagnosis may qualify for a Jones Act claim

NHL following years of maritime benzene exposure is a recognized occupational cancer outcome, and decades of occupational studies give affected seamen a strong scientific foundation for a legal claim. Compensation may cover medical costs, lost wages, pain and suffering, and wrongful death damages for surviving family members. ELG Law can look into your work history and medical records to see if you have a case.