When DTF powder is heated in dryers or heat presses (typically 80–180°C+), thermal degradation releases significant amounts of Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs), including isocyanate-related compounds (MDI and TDI derivatives). This is a critical hazard that many basic articles overlook.
Isocyanates such as toluene diisocyanate (TDI) and methylene diphenyl diisocyanate (MDI) are high-volume industrial chemicals, widely used in polyurethane foam, coatings, adhesives, and elastomers. Because of their extensive industrial use, occupational exposure is well documented and has been extensively studied in both toxicology and epidemiology.
According to the OSHA Isocyanates Hazard Recognition and Control, isocyanates are a major occupational health concern, particularly due to their strong respiratory sensitization effects and widespread industrial use.
The PubMed study on cancer incidence among isocyanate-exposed workers provides long-term cohort evidence from the polyurethane foam industry. While overall cancer incidence was not consistently elevated, multiple cohort studies (UK, US, and Sweden) observed a repeated pattern of increased lung cancer risk in female workers.
- In the Swedish cohort, female lung cancer mortality showed a significant excess (SMR 3.52).
- Similar elevated trends were observed in UK and US cohorts.
- No clear dose–response relationship was identified with measured TDI/MDI exposure levels, likely due to exposure misclassification and variability in workplace concentrations.
- Researchers concluded that a causal link could not be confirmed, but an occupational contribution could not be ruled out.
Animal studies referenced in the same body of research indicate that inhalation of MDI aerosols and polyurethane-related particulates can increase lung tumor incidence in rats, suggesting potential carcinogenic mechanisms under sustained exposure conditions.