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Occupational exposure to carbofuran and the incidence of cancer in the agricultural health study.


Carbofuran is a carbamate carbamate /car·ba·mate/ (kahr´bah-mat) any ester of carbamic acid.

car·ba·mate
n.
A salt or ester of carbamic acid.
 insecticide registered for use on a variety of food crops including corn, alfalfa alfalfa (ălfăl`fə) or lucern (lsûn`), perennial leguminous plant (Medicago sativa , rice, and tobacco. An estimated 5 million pounds of carbofuran is used annually in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. , and 45% of urban African-American women have detectable levels of carbofuran in their plasma. Nitrosated carbofuran has demonstrated mutagenic mutagenic

inducing genetic mutation.
 properties. We examined exposure to carbofuran and several tumor sites among 49,877 licensed pesticide applicators from Iowa and North Carolina North Carolina, state in the SE United States. It is bordered by the Atlantic Ocean (E), South Carolina and Georgia (S), Tennessee (W), and Virginia (N). Facts and Figures


Area, 52,586 sq mi (136,198 sq km). Pop.
 enrolled in the Agricultural Health Study. We obtained information regarding years of use, frequency of use in an average year, and when use began for 22 pesticides using self-administered questionnaires. Poisson regression In statistics, the Poisson regression model attributes to a response variable Y a Poisson distribution whose expected value depends on a predictor variable x, typically in the following way:

 was used to calculate rate ratios (RR) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) adjusting for potential confounders. Lung cancer lung cancer, cancer that originates in the tissues of the lungs. Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer death in the United States in both men and women. Like other cancers, lung cancer occurs after repeated insults to the genetic material of the cell.  risk was 3-fold higher for those with > 109 days of lifetime exposure to carbofuran (RR = 3.05; 95% CI, 0.94-9.87) compared with those with < 9 lifetime exposure days, with a significant dose-response trend for both days of use per year and total years of use. However, carbofuran use was not associated with lung cancer risk when nonexposed persons were used as the referent. In addition, carbofuran exposure was not associated with any other cancer site examined. Although carbamate pesticides are suspected human carcinogens Carcinogens
Substances in the environment that cause cancer, presumably by inducing mutations, with prolonged exposure.

Mentioned in: Colon Cancer, Rectal Cancer
, these results should be interpreted cautiously because there was no a priori a priori

In epistemology, knowledge that is independent of all particular experiences, as opposed to a posteriori (or empirical) knowledge, which derives from experience.
 hypothesis specifically linking carbofuran to lung cancer. Key words: agriculture, cancer incidence, carbofuran, lung cancer, pesticides. doi:10.1289/ehp.7451 available via http://dx.doi.org/[Online 2 December 2004]

**********

Carbofuran (2,3-dihydro-2,2-dimethylbenzofuran-7-yl methylcarbamate) is a carbamate insecticide registered for use on a variety of food crops including corn, alfalfa, rice, and tobacco (Tobin 1970). An estimated 5 million pounds of carbofuran are used annually in the United States, 48% of which is used on corn crops (Thelin and Gianessi 2000). In addition to agriculturally related exposure, the general U.S. population may also be commonly exposed to carbofuran. Forty-five percent of urban African-American women and their newborns had detectable levels of carbofuran in maternal plasma and umbilical cord blood umbilical cord blood Transplantation A source of primitive and stem cells that can be used to reconstitute BM destroyed by aplastic anemia or by RT or chemotherapy for CA, lymphoproliferative malignancies. See Bone marrow transplantation, Stem cell therapy.  (Whyatt et al. 2003).

Carbofuran has been demonstrated to have weak mutagenic activity in some, but not all, strains of Salmonella typhimurium Salmonella ty·phi·mu·ri·um
n.
A bacterium that causes food poisoning.
 (Hour et al. 1998; Moriya et al. 1983). Carbofuran induces chromosomal aberrations and micronucleus micronucleus /mi·cro·nu·cle·us/ (-noo´kle-us)
1. in ciliate protozoa, the smaller of two types of nucleus in each cell, which functions in sexual reproduction; cf. macronucleus.

2. a small nucleus.
 formation in exposed mice (Chauhan et al. 2000) and N-nitrosocarbofuran, derived from the nitrosation of carbofuran, has demonstrated mutagenic properties (Yoon et al. 2001). The evidence from animal models is inconclusive. Two studies demonstrated that carbofuran was able to induce lymphoma in Swiss mice (Borzsonyi and Pinter 1977; Borzsonyi et al. 1976), but carcinogenicity carcinogenicity /car·ci·no·ge·nic·i·ty/ (kahr?si-no-je-nis´i-te) the ability or tendency to produce cancer.

carcinogenicity

the ability or tendency to produce cancer.
 of carbofuran was not evident in several 2-year dietary studies conducted on rats (Gupta 1994).

In addition to the potential carcinogenicity of N-nitrosocarbofuran, carbamate pesticides have been shown to impair immunity in mice (Barnett et al. 1980; Street and Sharma 1975) and in humans (Fiore et al. 1986). Several epidemiologic investigations have examined exposure to carbamate pesticides, including carbofuran, and the risk of cancer. McDuffie et al. (2001) found elevated risk for non-Hodgkin lymphoma Non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) describes a group of cancers arising from lymphocytes, a type of white blood cell. It is distinct from Hodgkin lymphoma in its pathologic features, epidemiology, common sites of involvement, clinical behavior, and treatment.  (NHL NHL Non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, see there ) associated with the use of carbamate pesticides [odds ratio (OR) = 1.9; 95% confidence interval (CI), 1.2-3.0], but not with carbofuran specifically (OR = 1.6; 95% CI, 0.7-3.9). Zheng et al. (2001) observed elevated risk among farmers who used carbofuran (OR = 1.6; 95% CI, 1.1-2.3). In a nested case-control study A nested case-control study is a type of study design where new case controls are applied into cohorts which were defined before the study begins.

Compared with case-control study, nested case-control study can reduce 'recall bias' and temporal ambiguity, and compared with
 of structural pest control pest control ncontrol m de plagas

pest control nlutte f contre les nuisibles

pest control pest n
 workers in Florida, Pesatori et al. (1994) reported an increase in the OR for lung cancer among those who used carbamate insecticides (OR = 16.3; 95% CI, 2.2-122.5). Increased risk of lung cancer was not evident, however, in a population-based case-control study case-control study,
n an investigation employing an epidemiologic approach in which previously existing incidents of a medical condition are used in lieu of gathering new information from a randomized population.
 among residents of Saskatchewan, Canada (McDuffie et al. 1990). Considering the limited epidemiologic data on carbofuran and cancer, we examined the relationship between occupational exposure to carbofuran and several tumor sites in the Agricultural Health Study.

Materials and Methods

A detailed description the Agricultural Health Study (AHS AHS Assistant House Surgeon. ) has been previously published (Alavanja et al. 1996). Briefly, the AHS is a prospective cohort study A cohort study is a form of longitudinal study used in medicine and social science. It is one type of study design.

In medicine, it is usually undertaken to obtain evidence to try to refute the existence of a suspected association between cause and disease; failure to refute
 of 57,311 licensed restricted-use pesticide applicators and 32,347 of their spouses in Iowa and North Carolina. Licensed pesticide applicators include private applicators who are farmers and commercial applicators who are employed by pest control companies or businesses that use pesticides such as warehouse operators and grain millers. Recruitment started in December 1993 and ended 4 years later in December 1997. The National Death Index and state death registries were used to ascertain the vital status of cohort members. Incident cancers diagnosed between December 1993 and 31 December 2001 were identified through tumor registries and coded using the International Classification of Diseases for Oncology The International Classification of Diseases for Oncology (ICD-O) is a domain specific extension of the International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems for tumor diseases. This classification is widely used by cancer registries.  (ICD-O-2) (Percy et al. 1990). The average follow-up time was 6.4 years. Participants (n = 946) who moved out of either Iowa or North Carolina were censored in the year they moved. All participants provided informed consent; the protocol was approved by all appropriate Institutional Review Boards.

Exposure assessment. Study participants were asked to complete a self-administered questionnaire at the time of enrollment. We obtained information on 50 pesticides. Detailed data about years of use, frequency of use in an average year, and when use began were collected for 22 pesticides including carbofuran, and information on ever/never use of 28 other pesticides was collected at the time of enrollment. In addition, information regarding application methods and the use of personal protective equipment was collected. Participants also supplied information about important potential confounders such as smoking habits, alcohol intake, fruit and vegetable consumption, other agricultural activities, and non-farm-related occupational exposures. A previous analysis of the reliability of the AHS questionnaire showed that the level of agreement for pesticide use was similar to other factors routinely estimated with epidemiologic questionnaires (Blair et al. 2002).

For these analyses, we estimated exposure with total lifetime exposure-days to carbofuran. Lifetime exposure-days was defined as the product of the number of years a participant personally mixed or applied carbofuran and the number of days in an average year that carbofuran was used. In addition, we incorporated an algorithm developed by Dosemeci et al. (2002) to estimate an exposure intensity score and applied it to lifetime exposure-days metric. Briefly, the intensity score was designed to incorporate aspects of pesticide use that can modify actual exposure, including whether an applicator ap·pli·ca·tor
n.
An instrument for applying something, such as a medication.


applicator,
n a device for applying medication; usually a slender rod of glass or wood, used with a pledget of cotton on the end.
 personally mixed or prepared the pesticides for application, what type of application methods were used, the repair of pesticide application equipment, and the use of personal protective equipment during these activities. Dermal dermal /der·mal/ (der´mal) pertaining to the dermis or to the skin.

der·mal or der·mic
adj.
Of or relating to the skin or dermis.
 absorption is generally considered the major route of exposure for pesticide applicators (Maroni et al. 2000; Tobin 1970). Therefore, the intensity score heavily weighted the use of protective gloves and to a lesser extent protective clothing. We calculated intensity-weighted exposure-days as the product of the intensity score and total lifetime exposure-days. In addition to these exposure metrics, we also assessed the frequency (i.e., number of days/year applied) and the duration (total number of years applied) of carbofuran exposure in relation to cancer risk.

Statistical analysis. Prevalent cancer cases (n = 1,074) and applicators who failed to provide information about carbofuran use (n = 6,360) were excluded, leaving 49,877 cohort members from this analysis. Most of the subjects who were missing information on carbofuran use and other potential confounders were from North Carolina (64%). Two reference groups were used for these analyses: pesticide applicators who reported never using carbofuran and pesticide applicators whose use of carbofuran was in the lowest tertile of exposure.

We used Poisson regression to calculate rate ratios (RR) and 95% CIs. Lifetime exposure-days and intensity-weighted lifetime exposure-days to carbofuran were categorized into tertiles based on the distribution in all the cancer cases. The highest tertile was then divided at its midpoint mid·point  
n.
1. Mathematics The point of a line segment or curvilinear arc that divides it into two parts of the same length.

2. A position midway between two extremes.
 to increase the resolution at higher exposure levels. We limited analyses to tumor sites where there were more than five cases in each category of exposure. Models were adjusted for age at enrollment (< 40, 40-49, 50-59, [greater than or equal to] 60 years), sex, education ([less than or equal to] high school graduate, > high school graduate), smoking (by pack-years: never, [less than or equal to] 14, > 14), alcohol consumption during the last 12 months (yes/no), family history of cancer (yes/no), year at enrollment, state of residence (Iowa/North Carolina), and the five pesticides most highly correlated with carbofuran use [permethrin permethrin /per·meth·rin/ (per-meth´rin) a topical insecticide used in the treatment of infestations by Pediculus humanus capitis, Sarcoptes scabiei, or any of various ticks; also applied to objects such as furniture and bedding.  (crop), S-ethyl dipropylthiocarbamate (EPTC EPTC

S-ethyldipropylthiocarbamate; a thiocarbamate herbicide.
), chlorpyrifos, fonofos, and trichlorfon trichlorfon

an organophosphorus insecticide and anthelmintic, used in horses, often in combination with other anthelmintics, for treatment of endoparasites and cutaneous habronemiasis. Also used in dogs against whipworms and as a pour-on in cattle for control of warble flies.
: never, low, high exposure]. The correlation coefficients for these five pesticides ranged between 0.69 (permethrin) and 0.85 (trichlorfon). The cut point that dichotomized low and high exposure for each pesticide correlated with carbofuran was determined by the median for lifetime exposure-days for that particular pesticide. We based the cut points for days of use per year and years of use on the categorical responses to the following questions: "In an average year when you personally used this pesticide, how many days did you use it?" (< 5 days; 5-9 days; 10-19 days; 20-39 days; 40-59 days; 60-150 days; or > 150 days) and "How many years did you personally mix or apply this pesticide?" ([less than or equal to] 1 year or less; 2-5 years; 6-10 years; 11-20 years; 21-30 years; or > 30 years). For the analysis, we collapsed the upper categories to ensure that there were approximately five or more cases in each category.

We determined the most parsimonious par·si·mo·ni·ous  
adj.
Excessively sparing or frugal.



parsi·mo
 model (reduced) with -2 log-likelihood ratio tests by removing each covariate from the saturated (full) model and retaining only those variables that resulted in significant -2 log-likelihood ratio (Hosmer and Lemeshow 1989). The most parsimonious model included age, smoking (never, < 14 pack-years, and [greater than or equal to] 14 pack-years of smoking), family history of cancer, and trichlorofon and permethrin exposure.

To further control for potential confounding confounding

when the effects of two, or more, processes on results cannot be separated, the results are said to be confounded, a cause of bias in disease studies.


confounding factor
 by smoking, we also adjusted for several other smoking variables including smoking status (never, former, current), pack-years of smoking, duration of smoking, and number of cigarettes smoked per day. The inclusion of these additional smoking variables did not appreciably alter the risk estimates and were not retained in the models. Linear trends were assessed using the p-value of the coefficient of the exposure treated as a continuous value using the median value Noun 1. median value - the value below which 50% of the cases fall
median

statistics - a branch of applied mathematics concerned with the collection and interpretation of quantitative data and the use of probability theory to estimate population
 for each tertile of exposure in the models also adjusting for covariates (Breslow and Day 1987). Tests for interaction were performed by determining the significance of the coefficient of the product term of the exposure and the purported effect modifier (programming) modifier - An operation that alters the state of an object. Modifiers often have names that begin with "set" and corresponding selector functions whose names begin with "get". .

Results

Twenty-five percent of the pesticide applicators reported ever using carbofuran. Demographic characteristics of the non-carbofuran exposed and carbofuran exposed [categorized as low (tertile 1) and high exposure (tertiles 2 and 3)] are depicted in Table 1. The non-carbofuran exposed tended to be younger than either the low- or high-exposed carbofuran cohorts. The nonexposed were also more likely to be female than the exposed, although there were few women applicators in the study overall. Smoking status (never, former, or current), alcohol consumption in the last 12 months, attained education, state of residence, years of follow-up, and family history of cancer were all similar between the three groups. The mean number of smoking pack-years; however, sequentially increased between nonexposed, low-exposed, and the high-exposed groups. Cohort members exposed to carbofuran were more likely than nonexposed cohort members to be involved in corn production. Additionally, those exposed to carbofuran used more types of pesticides than non-carbofuran--exposed subjects.

We report on all cancer sites combined and tumor sites where sufficient numbers (at least five cases per cell) of cases occurred during follow-up to warrant statistical analyses: all lymphatic-hematopoietic cancers (Hodgkin, non-Hodgkin, multiple myeloma multiple myeloma

A malignant proliferation of abnormal plasma cells that populate the marrow-containing bones of the body. The affected plasma cells produce myeloma protein, a monoclonal antibody that replaces normal antibodies in the blood, thereby increasing susceptibility
, and leukemia leukemia (lkē`mēə), cancerous disorder of the blood-forming tissues (bone marrow, lymphatics, liver, spleen) characterized by excessive production of immature or mature ), NHL, and colon, lung, and prostate cancers.

Carbofuran exposure was not associated with the incidence of all cancers combined (Table 2) or with any tumor site examined except lung cancer. Lung cancer risk appeared to be positively associated with exposure to carbofuran when the low exposed were used as the reference group, although a test of the linear trend was not significant (10 for trend = 0.07). The lung cancer rate ratio was increased 3-fold among those with more than 109 lifetime-days of use (RR = 3.05; 95% CI, 0.94-9.87). When the nonexposed were used as the reference group, however, exposure to carbofuran was not associated with the lung cancer rate ratio.

An exposure--response relationship with the intensity-weighted lifetime exposure-days was not clearly evident for lung cancer (Table 3). Although the upper category of the intensity-weighted lifetime exposure-days suggests an increase in the relative risk, the exposure-response gradient was not monotonic monotonic - In domain theory, a function f : D -> C is monotonic (or monotone) if

for all x,y in D, x <= y => f(x) <= f(y).

("<=" is written in LaTeX as \sqsubseteq).
. Regarding the other cancer sites examined, there was no evidence of an association with intensity-weighted lifetime exposure-days when either the nonexposed or the low-exposed subjects were used as the referent (data not shown).

The risk of lung cancer also increased when the frequency of exposure (number of days of carbofuran use/year) and duration of exposure (number of years carbofuran was used) were examined separately (Table 3). However, the risk was only elevated in applicators who used carbofuran for > 10 years and for > 10 applications days per year.

To further examine and characterize the association between carbofuran exposure and lung cancer, we stratified stratified /strat·i·fied/ (strat´i-fid) formed or arranged in layers.

strat·i·fied
adj.
Arranged in the form of layers or strata.
 by smoking status (never, former, and current), state of residence (Iowa and North Carolina), histology histology (hĭstŏl`əjē), study of the groups of specialized cells called tissues that are found in most multicellular plants and animals.  (adenocarcinoma adenocarcinoma: see neoplasm.  and non-adenocarcinoma), and applicator type (farmer and commercial). The analyses stratified by smoking status were limited in that only one case of lung cancer was identified among never smokers and precluded an analysis restricted to never smokers. The risk estimates increased as exposure increased for both former and current smokers (Table 4), and the p for interaction was not significant (p = 0.36). Carbofuran exposure was associated with nonsignificant non·sig·nif·i·cant  
adj.
1. Not significant.

2. Having, producing, or being a value obtained from a statistical test that lies within the limits for being of random occurrence.
 increases in risk in both Iowa (2nd tertile: RR = 3.79, 95% CI, 0.73-19.55; 3rd tertile: RR = 5.90, 95% CI, 1.25-27.81) and North Carolina (2nd tertile: RR = 0.91, 95% CI, 0.20-4.05; 3rd tertile: RR = 2.49, 95% CI, 0.77-8.14). Although the point estimates of risk were greater in Iowa, the p-value for the interaction between state and carbofuran exposure was not significant (p for interaction = 0.53). Rate ratios were increased for both adenocarcinoma (2nd tertile: RR = 3.95, 95% CI, 0.41-38.02; 3rd tertile: RR = 7.87, 95% CI, 0.94-65.62) and non-adenocarcinoma (2nd tertile: RR = 1.35, 95% CI, 0.39-4.68; 3rd tertile: RR = 2.90, 95% CI, 1.0-8.36). Although the risk was considerably higher for adenocarcinoma, the p for interaction between histology and carbofuran use was not significant (p = 0.32). There was no evidence that applicator type either confounded or modified the association between carbofuran and lung cancer risk, although the number of commercial applicator lung cancer cases was low.

Discussion

An association between carbofuran and lung cancer has not been previously reported. Several studies, however, have found pesticides (Brownson et al. 1993; Wesseling et al. 1999) and more specifically carbamate pesticides (Pesatori et al. 1994) to be associated with lung cancer, although not all studies have reported this association (McDuffie et al. 1990). In our study, lung cancer was associated with lifetime exposure-days where risk increased across exposure categories to more than a 3-fold increase in the RR in the highest category when compared with those who had applied < 9 lifetime exposure-days. The risk estimates were also elevated when the components of the lifetime exposure-days exposure metric were considered separately. Lung cancer risk, however, was not associated with carbofuran exposure when the intensity-weighted exposure-days metric was used or when noncarbofuran--exposed pesticide applicators were used as the referent.

This inconsistency between the lung cancer risk estimates when nonexposed subjects were used as the referent may be caused partly by differences between nonexposed and low-exposed groups with regard to unknown factors. Initial descriptive analyses indicated that the nonexposed and the low-exposed groups had substantial differences with regard to corn production and the total number of pesticides used. The observed differences between those with carbofuran exposure and those without carbofuran exposure raise the possibility of confounding due to other unmeasured differences between the groups. Given these differences, the low-exposed subjects may be a more appropriate reference group, although the low-exposed group may be biased as well. In addition, the inconsistency observed between the lifetime exposure-days and intensity-weighted lifetime exposure-days metrics may have occurred because the AHS intensity-weighted algorithm greatly weights dermal exposure, and this route may be less appropriate for sites where the respiratory tract respiratory tract
n.
The air passages from the nose to the pulmonary alveoli, including the pharynx, larynx, trachea, and bronchi.


Respiratory tract 
 is the predominant exposure route, such as the lung. Further, the intensity-weighted algorithm, as constructed, also reflects more recent use of personal protective equipment and application methods. Malignant neoplasms generally have a long latency period latency period
n.
In psychoanalytic theory, the fourth stage of psychosexual development, extending from about age 5 to puberty, when a child apparently represses sexual urges and prefers to associate with members of the same sex.
. To the extent that recent exposure intensity does not accurately reflect past activities, the algorithm may increase exposure misclassification rather than reduce it.

The association between lung cancer and carbofuran exposure that we observed when the low-exposed group was used as the referent is unlikely to be confounded by smoking because pack-years of smoking was not correlated with lifetime exposure-days (r = 0.03) or intensity-weighted lifetime exposure-days (r = 0.02). Furthermore, we adjusted for smoking (never, < 14 pack-years, and [greater than or equal to] 14 pack-years) in the models. Even when we used pack-years as a continuous variable or a combination of smoking status (never, former, current), number of cigarettes smoked per day and number of years smoked, the risk estimates were similar with each respective model. We also stratified by smoking status and found that the association was relatively consistent between former and current smokers. There were too few lung cancer cases to determine whether carbofuran was associated with lung cancer independent of smoking. Therefore, we cannot rule out the possibility that the association between carbofuran and the risk of lung cancer is limited to smokers and former smokers.

Agricultural exposure to endotoxin Endotoxin

A biologically active substance produced by bacteria and consisting of lipopolysaccharide, a complex macromolecule containing a polysaccharide covalently linked to a unique lipid structure, termed lipid A.
 from rearing livestock has been hypothesized to reduce the risk of lung cancer (Lange et al. 2003a, 2003b, 2003c; Mastrangelo et al. 1996). Although we did not formally assess exposure to endotoxin, we conducted an analysis stratifying the cohort into those who were engaged in animal husbandry animal husbandry, aspect of agriculture concerned with the care and breeding of domestic animals such as cattle, goats, sheep, hogs, and horses. Domestication of wild animal species was a crucial achievement in the prehistoric transition of human civilization from  and those who were not. There was no indication that animal husbandry modified the effect of carbofuran use on lung cancer risk. In addition, engaging in animal husbandry did not confound the association between carbofuran use and lung cancer because the RRs were not altered when we included a binary animal husbandry variable in the model.

Several previous investigations of NHL have observed increases in risk associated with carbofuran exposure (McDuffie et al 2001; Zheng et al. 2001). In addition, results from several animal models support the hypothesis that exposure to carbofuran could be a risk factor for NHL (Borzsonyi and Pinter 1977; Borzsonyi et al. 1976). We found little evidence to support an association between NHL and carbofuran exposure, although relatively few cases of NHL had accrued at the time of this analysis.

There is evidence that carcinogenic carcinogenic

having a capacity for carcinogenesis.
 N-nitrosocarbofuran is formed from carbofuran and nitrites in the stomach. A priori, we expected carbofuran exposure to be associated with increased risk for stomach cancer; however, at the time these analyses were conducted, too few cases of stomach cancer had occurred in the carbofuran exposed cohorts for meaningful analysis.

There are some important limitations of this study. Although the incidence of cancers will increase as the cohort ages, currently we remain constrained by small numbers of cases for many tumor sites. For instance, only five cases of stomach cancer with exposure to carbofuran were available for analysis. The resulting statistical imprecision makes interpretation of risk estimates difficult in some instances. Another potential concern in prospective studies is loss to follow-up. However, losses to follow-up (< 2%) were few and were unlikely to substantially bias the risk estimates. In addition, pesticides are commonly used as formulations where only a percentage of the total product applied is the active ingredient An active ingredient, also active pharmaceutical ingredient (or API), is the substance in a drug that is pharmaceutically active. Some medications may contain more than one active ingredient. . Given that pesticides are applied as complex mixtures or solutions, we cannot rule out the possibility that the combination or the "inert" ingredients are the actual carcinogenic compound(s).

The strengths of this study include the prospective design, where exposure to pesticides was determined before the onset of disease, thereby eliminating the potential for recall bias. In addition, the exposure metrics used in this study represent a major improvement in the classification of pesticide exposure over previous studies, although, undoubtedly, some exposure misclassification is present in our estimates as well.

Multicolinearity between pesticides used may be another potential limitation of this study. We assessed exposure to 50 pesticides in registered pesticide applicators who, on average, used numerous pesticides. Because it is possible that carbofuran use is related to several other pesticides, we identified the five most correlated pesticides and adjusted for them in the model. Overall, exposure to other individual pesticides was highly correlated with carbofuran exposure. The correlation coefficients ranged between 0.69 (permethrin) and 0.85 (trichlorfon). However, these pesticides did not confound the association between carbofuran and lung cancer because the risk estimates were not altered when they were removed from the model. In addition, we also adjusted for cumulative lifetime application days of all pesticides, which did not appreciably alter the risk estimates.

Overall, we examined the risk of several cancer sites in relation to the carbofuran exposure. Carbofuran is a carbamate insecticide with questionable carcinogenic properties in animals. The parent compound does not seem to be genotoxic genotoxic /ge·no·tox·ic/ (je´no-tok?sik) damaging to DNA: pertaining to agents known to damage DNA, thereby causing mutations, which can result in cancer.

ge·no·tox·ic
adj.
. However, the metabolites Metabolites
Substances produced by metabolism or by a metabolic process.

Mentioned in: Interactions
 of carbofuran may be mutagenic, and there is good evidence that nitrosated carbofuran is mutagenic. This study suggests that carbofuran may be associated with an increase in the incidence of lung cancer. Conversely, carbofuran exposure was not associated with other tumor sites investigated. The results for lung cancer are provocative but should be interpreted cautiously in light of the paucity of other studies to corroborate To support or enhance the believability of a fact or assertion by the presentation of additional information that confirms the truthfulness of the item.

The testimony of a witness is corroborated if subsequent evidence, such as a coroner's report or the testimony of other
 these findings, and a reevaluation of carbofuran in the AHS cohort once more cancer cases have accrued is warranted.
Table 1. Selected characteristics of applicators, by carbofuran
exposure [no. (%)] in the AHS (1993-1997).

Characteristic                  Nonexposed          Low exposed

Age (years)
  < 40                        14,023 (37.6)         1,032 (21.8)
  40-49                       10,217 (27.4)         1,470 (31.0)
  50-59                        6,802 (18.3)         1,216 (25.7)
  [greater than or             6,210 (16.7)         1,016 (21.5)
    equal to] 60
Sex
  Male                        36,069 (96.8)         4,698 (99.2)
  Female                       1,190 (3.2)             36 (0.8)
State
  Iowa                        25,459 (68.3)         3,421 (72.3)
  North Carolina              11,800 (31.7)         1,313 (27.7)
Applicator type
  Farmer                      33,341 (89.5)         4,574 (96.6)
  Commercial                   3,918 (10.5)           160 (3.4)
Smoking
  Never                       19,976 (54.0)         2,509 (53.2)
  Former                      10,587 (28.7)         1,577 (33.4)
  Current                      6,396 (17.3)           635 (13.5)
Alcohol use (a)
  Yes                         25,352 (69.0)         3,260 (69.1)
Education
  [less than or equal to]     21,270 (57.2)         2,503 (53.0)
    High school
  > High school               15,897 (42.8)         2,219 (47.0)
Family history of cancer
  Yes                         13,339 (38.0)         2,099 (46.5)
Corn production
  Yes                         24,967 (67.0)         3,801 (80.0)
Other pesticide use
  Trichlorofon                   305 (0.8)             37 (0.8)
  Fonofos                      5,410 (14.5)         1,591 (34.4)
  Chlorpyrifos                12,908 (34.7)         2,534 (53.8)
  EPTC                         6,112 (16.8)         1,351 (29.5)
  Permethrin (b)               4,078 (11.1)           913 (19.9)
Person-years                     240549.2             29867.9
No. of other pesticides     11.5 [+ or -] 6.6    18.3 [+ or -] 6.6
  used (c)
Follow-up (years) (c)        6.5 [+ or -] 1.4     6.3 [+ or -] 1.4
Smoking (pack-years) (c)
  Former smokers            15.4 [+ or -] 20.1   15.0 [+ or -] 18.9
  Current smokers           22.0 [+ or -] 19.9   24.9 [+ or -] 21.3

Characteristic                 High exposed

Age (years)
  < 40                         1,739 (22.1)
  40-49                        2,532 (32.1)
  50-59                        2,056 (26.1)
  [greater than or             1,557 (19.7)
    equal to] 60
Sex
  Male                         7,819 (99.2)
  Female                          65 (0.8)
State
  Iowa                         4,908 (62.3)
  North Carolina               2,976 (37.7)
Applicator type
  Farmer                       7,355 (93.3)
  Commercial                     529 (6.7)
Smoking
  Never                        4,056 (51.6)
  Former                       2,560 (32.6)
  Current                      1,241 (15.8)
Alcohol use (a)
  Yes                          5,290 (67.8)
Education
  [less than or equal to]      4,372 (55.5)
    High school
  > High school                3,504 (45.9)
Family history of cancer
  Yes                          3,404 (45.9)
Corn production
  Yes                          6,226 (79.0)
Other pesticide use
  Trichlorofon                   160 (2.1)
  Fonofos                      2,969 (38.6)
  Chlorpyrifos                 4,982 (63.5)
  EPTC                         2,417 (31.8)
  Permethrin (b)               2,060 (27.1)
Person-years                     50852.2
No. of other pesticides     20.4 [+ or -] 7.2
  used (c)
Follow-up (years) (c)        6.5 [+ or -] 1.4
Smoking (pack-years) (c)
  Former smokers            15.8 [+ or -] 20.2
  Current smokers           27.0 [+ or -] 22.2

(a) Reported alcohol consumption within the last 12 months.
(b) Permethrin for use on crops. (c) Mean [+ or -] SD.

Table 2. RRs for selected cancers, by lifetime exposure-days to
carbofuran among AHS (1993-1997) applicators with nonexposed and
low-exposed groups as referents.

                                     Nonexposed        Low-exposed
Lifetime exposure         Cases       referent           referent
days (a)                   (n)      RR (95% CI)        RR (95% CI)

All cancers
  0                       1,012   1.0
  > 0-9                     151   0.95 (0.80-1.14)   1.0
  10-39                     115   0.95 (0.78-1.15)   1.00 (0.78-1.27)
  40-109                     80   1.05 (0.83-1.33)   1.11 (0.83-1.49)
  > 109                      51   0.94 (0.70-1.26)   0.96 (0.67-1.37)
  Trend (b)                       0.79               0.94
Lymphatic-hematopoietic
    cancers
  0                         103   1.0
  > 0-9                      11   0.68 (0.36-1.30)   1.0
  10-39                      10   0.82 (0.42-1.60)   1.05 (0.44-2.51)
  40-109                     11   1.38 (0.72-2.65)   1.56 (0.62-3.92)
  > 109                       5   0.86 (0.34-2.23)   0.77 (0.23-2.57)
  Trend (b)                       0.93               0.74
Non-Hodgkin lymphoma
  0                          44   1.0
  > 0-9                       6   0.77 (0.31-1.86)   1.0
  10-39                       7   1.27 (0.55-2.91)   1.33 (0.44-4.02)
  40-109                      7   1.40 (0.59-3.30)   1.08 (0.31-3.74)
  Trend (b)                       0.40               0.94
Colon
  0                          80   1.0
  > 0-9                      10   0.88 (0.45-1.72)   1.0
  10-39                       9   0.99 (0.49-2.02)   1.03 (0.41-2.56)
  40-109                      5   0.84 (0.33-2.12)   0.77 (0.25-2.42)
  109                         6   1.34 (0.54-3.31)   1.16 (0.36-3.71)
  Trend (b)                       0.68               0.85
Lung
  0                          98   1.0
  > 0-9                       6   0.42 (0.18-0.97)   1.0
  10-39                       8   0.68 (0.33-1.43)   1.61 (0.55-4.69)
  40-109                      9   1.09 (0.54-2.22)   2.54 (0.85-7.67)
  109                         8   1.38 (0.63-2.99)   3.05 (0.94-9.87)
  Trend (b)                       0.46               0.07
Prostate
  0                         372   1.0
  > 0-9                      85   1.30 (1.01-1.66)   1.0
  10-39                      48   0.99 (0.73-1.35)   0.79 (0.55-1.13)
  40-109                     29   1.03 (0.70-1.53)   0.86 (0.55-1.36)
  109                        17   0.88 (0.53-1.47)   0.73 (0.41-1.31)
  Trend (b)                       0.70               0.34

Rate ratios adjusted for age, sex, education, family history of
cancer, smoking, alcohol, year of enrollment, state of residence,
and exposure to EPTC, fonofos, trichlorofon, chlorpyrifos, and
permethrin.

(a) Years of use x days of use per year. (b) p-Value for trend test.

Table 3. RRs for lung cancer by carbofuran intensity-weighted lifetime
exposure days, exposure frequency (days per year), and exposure
duration (years of use) in the AHS (1993-1997).

                     Cases       Full model           Reduced model
                      (n)      RR (95% CI) (a)       RR (95% CI) (b)

Intensity-weighted
    lifetime
    exposure days
    (c)
  > 0-63               6       1.0                   1.0
  64-196              11       2.11 (0.77-5.78)      2.42 (0.89-6.54)
  197-487              5       1.19 (0.35-4.03)      1.58 (0.48-5.19)
  > 487                9       2.10 (0.69-6.39)      3.40 (1.21-9.58)
  Trend (d)                    0.40                  0.23
Days of use/year
  < 5                  9       1.0                   1.0
  5-9                  9       1.53 (0.59-3.95)      1.67 (0.66-4.21)
  10-19                9       2.98 (1.07-8.33)      3.84 (1.52-9.71)
  [greater than or     4       4.13 (1.13-15.08)     5.63 (1.73-18.35)
    equal to] 20
  Trend (d)                  < 0.01                < 0.01
Years of use
  [less than or       16       1.0                   1.0
    equal to] 5
  6-10                 6       0.80 (0.30-2.10)      1.00 (0.39-2.55)
  > 10                 9       1.95 (0.80-4.77)      3.00 (1.32-6.81)
  Trend (d)                    0.02                < 0.01

(a) Rate ratios adjusted for age, sex, education, family history of
cancer, smoking, alcohol, year of enrollment, state of residence,
and exposure to EPTC, fonofos, trichlorofon, chlorpyrifos, and
permethrin. (b) Rate ratios adjusted for age, smoking (never, < 14
pack-years, [greater than or equal to]  14 pack-years), family history
of cancer, and exposure to trichlorofon and permethrin. (c) Years of
use x days of use per year x intensity score. (d) p-Value for trend
test.

Table 4. RRs for lung cancer and lifetime exposure-days to
carbofuran, by smoking status in the AHS (1993-1997).

                                    Former smokers

Lifetime exposure days (a)   Cases (n)       RR (95% CI)

> 0-9                            3         1.0
10-39                            3         1.87 (0.42-8.37)
> 39                            11         4.88 (1.36-17.52)
Trend (b)                                < 0.01
p for interaction                               0.36

                                  Current smokers

Lifetime exposure days (a)   Cases (n)      RR (95% CI)

> 0-9                            3       1.0
10-39                            4       1.75 (0.39-7.90)
> 39                             6       2.49 (0.62-10.00)
Trend (b)                                0.23
p for interaction                     0.36

Rate ratios adjusted for age, smoking (never, < 14 pack-years,
[greater than or equal to] 14 pack-years), family history of
cancer, exposure to trichlorofon and permethrin.

(a) Years of use x days of use per year. (b) p-Value for trend test.


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Matthew R. Bonner, (1) Won Jin Lee, (1,2) Dale P. Sandler, (3) Jane A. Hoppin, (3) Mustafa Dosemeci, (1) and Michael C. R. Alavanja (1)

(1) Occupational and Environmental Epidemiology Branch, Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, Maryland Bethesda is an urbanized, but unincorporated, area in southern Montgomery County, Maryland, just Northwest of Washington, D.C. It takes its name from a church located there, the Bethesda Presbyterian Church, built in 1820 and rebuilt in 1850, which in turn took its name from , USA; (2) Department of Preventive Medicine preventive medicine, branch of medicine dealing with the prevention of disease and the maintenance of good health practices. Until recently preventive medicine was largely the domain of the U.S. , College of Medicine, Korea University This article is about the university in Seoul, South Korea. For the Chongryon-affiliated school in Tokyo, Japan, see Korea University (Japan).

Along the modern Korean history, Korea University has been one of the craddles of manpower in Korean society
, Seoul, Korea; (3) Epidemiology Branch, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences The National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) is one of 27 Institutes and Centers of the National Institutes of Health (NIH),which is a component of the Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS). The Director of the NIEHS is Dr. David A. Schwartz. , Research Triangle Park Research Triangle Park, research, business, medical, and educational complex situated in central North Carolina. It has an area of 6,900 acres (2,795 hectares) and is 8 × 2 mi (13 × 3 km) in size. Named for the triangle formed by Duke Univ. , North Carolina, USA

Address correspondence to M.R. Bonner, Occupational and Environmental Epidemiology Branch, National Cancer Institute, 6120 Executive Blvd., EPS (Encapsulated PostScript) A PostScript file format used to transfer a graphic image between applications and platforms. EPS files contain PostScript code as well as an optional preview image in TIFF, WMF, PICT or EPSI, the latter being an ASCII-only format.  8121, MSC (1) (MSC.Software Corporation, Santa Ana, CA, www.mscsoftware.com) Founded in 1963 by Richard H. MacNeal and Robert G. Schwendler, MSC is the world's largest provider of mechanical computer aided engineering (MCAE) strategies, simulation software and services.  7240, Bethesda, MD 20892-7240 USA. Telephone: (301) 402-7825. Fax: (301) 402-1819. E-mail: bonnerm@mail.nih.gov

This work was supported by intramural intramural /in·tra·mu·ral/ (-mu´r'l) within the wall of an organ.

in·tra·mu·ral
adj.
Occurring or situated within the walls of a cavity or organ.
 funds from the National Cancer Institute.

Received 27 July 2004; accepted 2 December 2004.
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Author:Alavanja, Michael C.R.
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