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Pancreatic Cancer Linked to Herbicides

  • Some weed killers may need to be treated with more respect
    By Janet Raloff
    Science News, May 28, 2009
    Straight to the Source

A new study links two weed killers with pancreatic cancer in pesticide applicators and their spouses. The authors, most of whom work for the National Cancer Institute, note that they are the first to link this particular malignancy with the farm chemicals - pendimethalin and EPTC - and really don't know how either would trigger cancer (although they do have a theory). But for now they are recommending that "these findings should be considered hypothesis generating and in need of confirmation."

How's that for not hyping your data?

Pancreatic cancer is a rare disease and nearly always fatal. Producing few early symptoms, the disease is usually diagnosed once the cancer is advanced. But even where the cancer is found fairly early and removed, only one in five patients survive five years. And there is basically no cure. Which explains why this malignancy is the fourth leading cause of cancer deaths in the United States.

With such a poor prognosis, there's been a push to understand what might predispose someone to develop the disease. Cigarette smoking seems to double risk, and a host of other factors also up the odds that someone will get this cancer - such as obesity, chronic pancreatitis, diabetes, cirrhosis and chewing tobacco. Taken together, however, these risks still only explain about a quarter of cases.

A couple epidemiological studies had suggested that certain agricultural chemicals, principally weed killers, might spike someone's risk. So Gabriella Andreotti of NCI's division of cancer epidemiology and genetics, in Bethesda, Md., and her colleagues decided to probe risks of the disease among the 89,000 participants of a long-running federally funded Agricultural Health Study. Its participants include 57,000 private, licensed pesticide applicators (mostly white men) and some 32,000 wives of applicators. All lived in Iowa or North Carolina when they were recruited in the mid-1990s.

Throughout the first seven years of followup, 93 cases of pancreatic cancer developed - 64 in applicators, the rest in spouses. As in other studies, smoking, having diabetes, or tipping the scales at an undesirable weight all increased an individual's odds of developing cancer. But after adjusting for these risk factors, two of some 50 pesticides showed a statistically significant correlation with the cancer. 

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