Research into occupational asbestos exposure has extended well beyond the lungs. Multiple large meta-analyses now show a statistically significantly elevated risk of colorectal cancer, including rectal cancer, in workers with sustained asbestos exposure. For maritime workers who spent careers in fiber-saturated shipboard environments, that research carries direct relevance.
Claim ApplicationAsbestos fibers inhaled during work are not always retained in the lungs. Many are cleared through the mucociliary system, swallowed, and carried through the gastrointestinal tract, where they can reach and interact with rectal tissue. Prolonged contact with the intestinal lining triggers chronic irritation, oxidative stress, and inflammation, conditions that over time create the DNA damage and cellular instability that precede malignancy.
A large meta-analysis, published in the occupational medicine literature, showed risk ratios for colorectal cancer in asbestos-exposed workers ranging from about 1.16 to 1.29, with stronger associations in workers with heavy exposure (e.g., insulation workers, shipyard cohorts). Another systematic review found statistically significant increases in colorectal cancer mortality in exposed workers, with risk increasing with cumulative exposure.
The evidence for rectal cancer specifically is classified as limited but suggestive in certain high-exposure conditions, a distinction that matters in legal claims where the degree and duration of maritime asbestos exposure can be documented and argued.
A rectal cancer diagnosis following years of maritime work may qualify for compensation under the Jones Act. The strength of a claim will frequently rest on the documented history of exposure on board the ship, the latency between that exposure and the time of diagnosis, and the medical evidence linking the two. Contact ELG Law to have your case reviewed by a legal team experienced in Jones Act claims.