A disease most people have never heard of
Sarcoidosis sounds like a rare word because it is. The disease affects only a small share of the population, mostly young and middle-aged adults.
But the people who get it know exactly how disruptive it can be. Sarcoidosis causes clumps of immune cells, called granulomas, to form in organs. The lungs are hit most often. Shortness of breath, chronic cough, fatigue, and skin or eye changes can follow. Some patients recover. Others develop long-term breathing problems.
For decades, doctors have asked the same question. Why does the immune system suddenly act up like this?
We do not yet know what causes sarcoidosis. What is clear is that genetics alone do not explain it. Something in the environment plays a role.
That means it may be partly preventable. If certain jobs or exposures raise the risk, workers can be warned. Safety measures can be strengthened. Companies can change practices.
Old view vs. a clearer picture
Doctors have long suspected links between sarcoidosis and specific exposures. The connection between firefighters and 9/11 responders and the disease is well documented. But for most other exposures, the evidence was scattered.
This new review pulled together 13 studies that tested specific workplace hazards against sarcoidosis rates. The goal was to see which links were real and which were just noise.
How it works, in plain English
Think of your immune system as a home security team. Its job is to spot invaders and neutralize them. In sarcoidosis, that security team sees something that looks like an invader and surrounds it with guards.
Those guards are the granulomas. They get stuck in place, even when the supposed invader is gone. Over time, they can damage the tissue around them.
The question researchers want to answer is what the immune system is reacting to. Inhaled dusts and chemicals are the most likely culprits.
The study snapshot
Researchers searched medical databases for studies published between 2000 and early 2025. They grouped exposures into five categories: chemicals, inorganic dusts, metals, mixed dusts and fumes, and organic dusts.
They pooled the data statistically when enough studies were available. They also checked how high-quality the individual studies were, and whether the overall findings held up when only the best studies were included.
Here's what they found
Four exposures stood out as linked to higher sarcoidosis risk:
- Silica (common in construction, mining, stone cutting)
- Pesticides (agricultural workers)
- Mold and mildew (water-damaged buildings, certain agricultural settings)
- World Trade Center dust (9/11 responders and nearby residents)
The associations for World Trade Center dust and mold held up when only the strongest studies were analyzed. The silica connection weakened somewhat in those higher-quality analyses.
One surprise: gold exposure appeared protective. Workers in gold-related industries had lower rates of sarcoidosis than comparison groups.
But here is the catch.
Just because exposures are linked to sarcoidosis does not mean they directly cause it. Some people work around silica for years without ever getting sick. Others develop the disease after little exposure.
Genetics, infections, and random bad luck likely all play roles too. The immune system reaction may be triggered by a mix, not just one thing.
How the researchers read it
The authors stop short of declaring a clear cause-effect relationship. They argue that the findings support a long-held idea, that sarcoidosis arises from a combination of genes meeting the wrong environment.
They call for future research to dig into gene-environment interactions. That could help explain why only some exposed people get sick.
If you work with construction dust, agricultural chemicals, or in moldy buildings, take protective measures seriously. Proper masks. Good ventilation. Regular health checkups.
If you worked near the 9/11 site, you likely already know about monitoring programs. Stay enrolled. Report new respiratory symptoms promptly.
If you have unexplained cough, shortness of breath, or fatigue, especially with a job involving inhaled particles, mention it to your doctor. Sarcoidosis is often diagnosed late because it mimics more common illnesses.
The limits
Only 13 studies ended up in the quantitative analysis. That is modest. Results for some exposures could shift as more research accumulates.
Many of the studies relied on workers recalling their own exposure histories, which can be inaccurate. Real-time exposure measurements are rare.
The gold finding is intriguing but based on limited data. Until more research replicates it, doctors are unlikely to recommend gold as protection.
Scientists want to analyze the mineral content of granulomas themselves. If specific particles show up in the immune clumps, that would offer strong evidence linking exposure to disease.
Genetic studies may also identify who is most vulnerable. Preventing sarcoidosis may one day mean screening workers at higher genetic risk before they take jobs with high-exposure potential.