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NC STATE UNIVERSITY Understanding the Agricultural Health Study Prepared by Julia F. Storm, MSPH North Carolina Cooperative Extension North Carolina State.

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Presentation on theme: "NC STATE UNIVERSITY Understanding the Agricultural Health Study Prepared by Julia F. Storm, MSPH North Carolina Cooperative Extension North Carolina State."— Presentation transcript:

1 NC STATE UNIVERSITY Understanding the Agricultural Health Study Prepared by Julia F. Storm, MSPH North Carolina Cooperative Extension North Carolina State University Department of Environmental & Molecular Toxicology

2 NC STATE UNIVERSITY Understanding the Agricultural Health Study Part 1: Overview  Long-term health study –certified pesticide applicators and farm families –Iowa and North Carolina  Overview –Who - Where –What- Why –When- How

3 NC STATE UNIVERSITY An Important Note  NO Agricultural Health Study participants are depicted in photos  Agricultural Health Study –Confidential –Secure –Ethical

4 NC STATE UNIVERSITY Disease? What Exposures are associated with

5 NC STATE UNIVERSITY Agricultural Health Study Scientists  National Cancer Institute  National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences  US Environmental Protection Agency –University of Iowa College of Public Health –Battelle Centers for Public Health Research and Evaluation (North Carolina) –National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health

6 NC STATE UNIVERSITY Agricultural Health Study Participants  Certified pesticide applicators and farmers’ spouses (89,658) –North Carolina:  Farmers (20,518)  Spouses (10,576) –Iowa:  Farmers (31,877)  Spouses (21,771)  Commercial applicators (4,916)

7 NC STATE UNIVERSITY Participants Reflect Agriculture of Iowa...  Farmers: white males  Farm Size: 75% > 500 acres  Crops/Livestock –Corn, Soybeans –Hogs  Commercial applicators –Younger than farmers –Landscape, highway weed control, agricultural

8 NC STATE UNIVERSITY... and North Carolina  Farmers –Mostly male –3% African-American  Farm Size: 55% <200 acres  Diverse Crops/Livestock

9 NC STATE UNIVERSITY Agricultural Health Study Female Participants  3% of Pesticide Applicators are women  Farm wives: –Active in farm work (51%) –Mixed or applied pesticides (40%)

10 NC STATE UNIVERSITY Previous Studies of Agriculture and Health  Health Pluses:  Live longer  Lower heart disease death rate  Lower death rate due to some cancers: –Lung –Esophagus –Bladder –Colon  Health Problems:  Higher risk of injury  Risk of lung disease (not lung cancer)  Skin conditions  Higher rates of certain cancers  Other: immune, nervous, reproductive system

11 NC STATE UNIVERSITY Questions 1 2 3 4 5 6 Scientists Navigate a Maze of Information 7 Answers More Questions

12 NC STATE UNIVERSITY 1 - Enroll volunteers into the study  During 1993-1997  Applicators –At pesticide safety training classes  Spouses of farmers – At home

13 NC STATE UNIVERSITY  Farm work related  Environmental 2 – Survey participants

14 NC STATE UNIVERSITY  Lifestyle  Medical history 2 – Survey participants

15 NC STATE UNIVERSITY  Develop exposure formula  Test formula in real world –Measure pesticide exposure on 100 farms 3 – Estimate pesticide exposure

16 NC STATE UNIVERSITY 4 – Collect a genetic sample  Rinse and spit –Mouthwash rinses cells from mouth –Cells contain DNA  Sample used in laboratory studies

17 NC STATE UNIVERSITY 5 – Collect health data from databases  Cancer registries –Iowa –North Carolina  Death certificate –State –National

18 NC STATE UNIVERSITY 6 – Analyze the information Users of Pesticide X Non-users of Pesticide X Different disease risk? Have disease No disease Exposures different? Applicators Spouses General Population Cancer rates different?

19 NC STATE UNIVERSITY 7 – Update Information  Repeat Steps –2: Survey participants –5: Collect health database info –6: Analyze information Answers More Questions 2 5 6

20 NC STATE UNIVERSITY Study Timeline 1993–1997Recruit & survey participants 1998–2003Field test exposure estimates; Collect genetic sample 2004–2008Assess disease rates & risk factors 2009–2013Evaluate disease mechanisms

21 NC STATE UNIVERSITY  High Pesticide Exposure Events  Pesticides of Interest  Estimating Exposure to Applicators  Measuring Pesticide Exposure Understanding the Agricultural Health Study Part 2: Pesticide Exposure

22 NC STATE UNIVERSITY High Pesticide Exposure Events (HPEE)  14% of applicators reported HPEE  Risk factors –Repair application equipment –Delay in changing/washing  Characteristics –Mix pesticide/family wash –Believe farming is highly risky –Farm in financial stress

23 NC STATE UNIVERSITY Medical Visits for Pesticide Exposure  7% of applicators  3,733 medical visits  Risk Factors: –Use insecticides and fumigants vs. herbicides –Mix pesticides more than 50% of the time –Repair own equipment

24 NC STATE UNIVERSITY African-American Farmers  Reported –Less pesticide use, fewer high exposure application methods –More PPE use (except chemically- resistant gloves) –Fewer health symptoms

25 NC STATE UNIVERSITY Pesticides of Interest  First survey: 50 crop/livestock pesticides –40 Current-Use Pesticides  16 insecticides, 16 herbicides, 6 fungicides, 2 fumigants –10 Historical-Use Pesticides  Follow-up surveys: all pesticides used in previous season

26 NC STATE UNIVERSITY Top 11 Pesticides Used 1993-97 North Carolina Iowa PESTICIDETYPEPESTICIDETYPE GlyphosateH2,4-DH 2,4 DHGlyphosateH AtrazineHImazethapyrH ChlorpyrifosIAtrazineH Methyl bromideFUMDicambaH CarbarylIMetolachlorH HTrifluralinH ChlorothalonilFGChlorpyrifosI MetalaxylFGCyanazineH AlachlorHTerbufosI MalathionIAlachlorH

27 NC STATE UNIVERSITY Estimating Pesticide Exposure: A New Approach Lifetime Applicator Pesticide Exposure =Pesticide application days/year X Years of pesticide use NoneLowMediumHigh X Average Work-Day Exposure Score X Average Work-Day Exposure Score

28 NC STATE UNIVERSITY Average Work-Day Exposure Score (0 to 20) = Mix(0,3,9) + Apply (1 to 9) (1 to 9) + Repair (0,2) (0,2) X PPE (0.1 to 1)

29 NC STATE UNIVERSITY Iowa Example: 2,4-D Exposure  Farmer “Bill” grows 1000 acres corn  Applies 2,4-D to control weeds after plant emergence using boom sprayer

30 NC STATE UNIVERSITY Iowa Example: Bill’s 2,4-D Average Work-Day Exposure FORMULAVALUE WHAT BILL DOES Mix 9 Mixes > 50% of time Apply + 3 Uses boom on tractor Repair + 2 Repairs in field = 14 PPE X.4 Wears chemically resistant gloves, goggles Score5.6

31 NC STATE UNIVERSITY North Carolina Example: Chlorpyrifos Exposure  Farmer “Fred” grows 300 acres peanuts  Applies granular chlorpyrifos for southern corn rootworm

32 NC STATE UNIVERSITY NC Example: Fred’s Chlorpyrifos Average Work-Day Exposure FORMULAVALUE WHAT FRED DOES Mix 9 Mixes > 50% of time Apply + 1 Applies granular formulation Repair + 2 Repairs in field =12 PPE X.6 Wears chemically- resistant gloves Score7.2

33 NC STATE UNIVERSITY Iowa and NC Examples: Lifetime Exposure  Iowa Corn Farmer “Bill’s” Lifetime 2,4-D Exposure =5.6 X 10 days/year X 15 years =840  NC Peanut Farmer “Fred’s” Lifetime Chlorpyrifos Exposure =7.2 X 3 days/year X 10 years = 216

34 NC STATE UNIVERSITY 2,4-D Exposure in the AHS Average Work-Day NC:7.6 Farmers:6.5 IA:6.0 “Bill”5.6 Commercial:5.1 Lifetime Commercial:1692 NC: 1249 IA:1116 Farmers:1096 “Bill” 840

35 NC STATE UNIVERSITY Testing the Formula by Measuring Pesticide Exposure  100 farms; 8 field situations  2,4-D and chlorpyrifos  Before, during, after application –Personal air (applicator) –Dermal patch (applicator) –Urine (applicator, spouse, children)  Formula estimate matches measurements

36 NC STATE UNIVERSITY Use of PPE Good News/Bad News  Chemically-resistant glove use doubled from 1980’s to 1990’s in NC –21% vs. 46%  PPE use greater in Iowa, except respirators  Never use PPE –4% (Iowa) –18% (NC)

37 NC STATE UNIVERSITY Understanding the Agricultural Health Study Part 3: Health Findings  Cancers  Nervous system  Respiratory system  Reproductive health

38 NC STATE UNIVERSITY Cancer Incidence Compared to General Population  Overall cancer rate lower  Rates for 18 of 20 cancers lower Applicators Spouses General Population  Applicators: Prostate cancer higher  Spouses: Skin melanomas higher

39 NC STATE UNIVERSITY Childhood Cancer: Interpret with Caution  Children of Iowa Farmer Applicators –Slightly increased rates of  All childhood cancers  All lymphomas Children of Iowa Applicators General Population of Children in Iowa

40 NC STATE UNIVERSITY Pesticides and Prostate Cancer  Prostate cancer associated with –Methyl bromide –Chlorinated pesticides (in men over 50) –5 pesticides and men with a family history of prostate cancer

41 NC STATE UNIVERSITY Pesticides and Other Cancers  Breast cancer in farmer’s wives –NO clear association with 50 pesticides  Lung cancer in applicators –Possible association with metolachlor, pendimethalin, chlorpyrifos, diazinon

42 NC STATE UNIVERSITY Cancer and Exposure to Certain Pesticides  Alachlor  Atrazine  Carbofuran  Chlorpyrifos  Glyphosate Users of Pesticide X Non-users of Pesticide X

43 NC STATE UNIVERSITY Respiratory Health  Wheeze associated with –Pesticides –Diesel tractor use –Solvent use –Animal production  Poultry (eggs), dairy  Daily vet procedures

44 NC STATE UNIVERSITY Nervous System Health  Retinal degeneration associated with –Fungicide use  Applicators  Farm wives  Fungicide exposure studied

45 NC STATE UNIVERSITY Female Reproductive Health  Pesticide users –Longer menstrual cycles –Missed periods  Users of hormonally-active pesticides –Long cycles –Missed periods –Intermenstrual bleeding Farmer’s Wives (Non-Users) Farmer’s Wives Female Applicators (Pesticide Users)

46 NC STATE UNIVERSITYSummary  Agricultural Health Study –Important strengths, unique features –More info to come in next 10-15 years  Strongest findings as of 2005 –Methyl bromide and prostate cancer –Fungicides and retinal degeneration

47 NC STATE UNIVERSITYRecommendations  Review pesticide labels  Use PPE –Chemically-resistant gloves –Have PPE available for field repairs  Ask your doctor about: –Prostate cancer screening (if 50 or older) –Lung health screening and respirator use –Skin cancer screening  Cover up and use sunscreen

48 NC STATE UNIVERSITYQuestions

49  Visit Understanding the AHS web site: http://extension.tox.ncsu.edu http://extension.tox.ncsu.edu  Visit Agricultural Health Study web site: http://www.aghealth.org http://www.aghealth.org  Contact: julia_storm@ncsu.edu For More Information

50 NC STATE UNIVERSITYACKNOWLEDGEMENTS  Authors: –Julia F. Storm, MSPH W. Gregory Cope, PhD Wayne G. Buhler, PhD Katherine McGinnis  Funding: –NIOSH through the Southern Coastal Agromedicine Center  Reviewers: –Agricultural Health Study Scientists and National Advisory Panel –Iowa State University Extension –Other Extension and industry colleagues

51 NC STATE UNIVERSITY Study Timeline 1993–1997Recruit & survey participants 1998–2003Field test exposure estimates; Collect genetic sample 2004–2008Assess disease rates & risk factors 2009–2013Evaluate disease mechanisms


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