| Literature DB >> 21269927 |
Caroline M Tanner1, Freya Kamel, G Webster Ross, Jane A Hoppin, Samuel M Goldman, Monica Korell, Connie Marras, Grace S Bhudhikanok, Meike Kasten, Anabel R Chade, Kathleen Comyns, Marie Barber Richards, Cheryl Meng, Benjamin Priestley, Hubert H Fernandez, Franca Cambi, David M Umbach, Aaron Blair, Dale P Sandler, J William Langston.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mitochondrial dysfunction and oxidative stress are pathophysiologic mechanisms implicated in experimental models and genetic forms of Parkinson's disease (PD). Certain pesticides may affect these mechanisms, but no pesticide has been definitively associated with PD in humans.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21269927 PMCID: PMC3114824 DOI: 10.1289/ehp.1002839
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health Perspect ISSN: 0091-6765 Impact factor: 9.031
Relationship of PD to paraquat or rotenone exposure in human populations.
| Study | Design | Method of assessing pesticide use | No. enrolled (cases, controls) | Finding | OR (95% CI) or | Exposed |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Paraquat
| ||||||
| Case report | Medical history | 1 case | Symptoms “comparable to PD” in a 32-year-old farmer after 15 years of paraquat use | NA | 1 case | |
| Case–control | Specific question re: paraquat use | 57 cases | Association with PD | 4 cases | ||
| 122 controls | 0 controls | |||||
| Case–control | General questions re: pesticide use | 130 cases | One case with early-onset PD (< age 40 years) reported using paraquat (ages 26–31 years) | NA | 1 case | |
| 260 cases | ||||||
| Case–control | Specific question re: paraquat use | 127 cases | 1.11 (0.32–3.87) | 6 cases | ||
| 245 controls | No association with PD | 5 controls | ||||
| 1.25 (0.34–4.63) | 6 cases | |||||
| 4 controls | ||||||
| Case–control | Open-ended question re: pesticide use | 120 cases | No association with PD | 3.22 (2.41–4.31) | 31 cases | |
| 240 controls | 22 controls | |||||
| Case–control | Checklist | 250 cases | Association with PD | 1.67 (0.22–12.76) | 2 cases | |
| 388 controls | 2 controls | |||||
| Case–control | Specific question re: paraquat use | 83 prevalent cases | Association with PD in prevalent cases | 1.8 (1.0–3.4) | 14 prevalent | |
| 79,557 controls | 11,266 controls | |||||
| 78 incident cases | No association with PD in incident cases | 1.0 (0.5–1.9) | 11 incident | |||
| 55,931 controls | 7,382 controls | |||||
| Case–control | Specific question re: occupational paraquat use | 519 cases | Association with PD | 2.80 (0.81–9.72) | 9 cases | |
| 511 controls | 4 controls | |||||
| Case–control | Checklist | 404 incident cases | Added subjects to 2005 interim population | 0.9 (0.14–5.43) | 2 cases | |
| 526 controls | No association with PD in reanalysis | 3 controls | ||||
| Rotenone
| ||||||
| Case–control | Specific question re: rotenone use in a supplementary questionnaire | 83 prevalent cases | Association of PD with ever use | 1.7 (0.6–4.7) | 4 prevalent | |
| 79,557 controls | 671 controls | |||||
| 78 incident cases | Could not determine | 1 incident | ||||
| 55,931 controls | 565 controls | |||||
| Case–control | Specific question re: occupational rotenone use | 519 cases | No association with PD | 0.82 (0.05–13.34) | 1 case | |
| 511 controls | 1 control | |||||
| Case–control | General question re: “organic pesticides” | 100 cases | Greater use of “organic pesticides such as rotenone” in PD patients | 10.0 (2.9–34.3) | 27 cases | |
| 84 controls | 3 controls | |||||
NA, not analyzed.
Four PD patients and no controls reported paraquat contact; OR could not be calculated;
Occupational pesticide exposures were identified from a checklist of common chemical agents and home-based pesticide exposures from a checklist of commercial brand name products.
Subjects reported exposures to various industrial toxicants identified from a checklist.
Figure 1Screening process of cases and controls. We identified 170 suspect cases and 644 potential controls and screened 156 (92%) and 542 (84%) of these, respectively. We conducted study evaluations in 137 (88%) of eligible suspect cases (including four initially identified as potential controls who self-reported PD at screening) and 383 (71%) of eligible potential controls. Suspect cases were evaluated in home visits or from medical records, matched controls in home visits. Final diagnoses in suspect cases were PD (115), essential tremor/other tremor disorder (12), no neurologic diagnosis (5), dystonia (2), multiple system atrophy (2), and atypical parkinsonism not fulfilling any diagnostic criterion (1). The latter three cases were subsequently termed “atypical parkinsonism.”
Characteristics of subjects.
| Characteristic | Cases | Controls |
|---|---|---|
| 110 | 358 | |
| Age at FAME enrollment [years (mean ± SD)] | 70 ± 8 | 69 ± 8 |
| Men [ | 80 (73) | 265 (74) |
| Residence in Iowa (vs. North Carolina) [ | 79 (72) | 262 (73) |
| Non-Hispanic white (vs. other) [ | 107 (97) | 350 (98) |
| Pesticide applicator (vs. spouse) [ | 80 (73) | 267 (75) |
| Education > high school [ | 49 (45) | 178 (50) |
| PD in first-degree relative [ | 18 (16) | 22 (6) |
| Smoked at least 100 cigarettes [ | 31 (28) | 141 (39) |
| BSIT (mean score ± SD) | 5.5 ± 2.8 | 8.8 ± 2.3 |
| CASI (mean score ± SD) | 89.2 ± 8.5 | 93.1 ± 5.0 |
| Clinical features among cases | ||
| Age at PD diagnosis [years (mean ± SD)] | 61 ± 9 | — |
| PD duration at FAME enrollment [years (median ± SD)] | 7 ± 6 | — |
| Resting tremor [ | 100/108 (93) | — |
| Bradykinesia [ | 105/110 (95) | — |
| Rigidity [ | 106/107 (99) | — |
| Postural reflex impairment [ | 61/92 (66) | — |
| Asymmetric onset [ | 102/104 (98) | — |
| Response to dopaminergic therapy (if prescribed) [ | 95/98 (97) | — |
Abbreviations: BSIT, Brief Smell Identification Test; CASI, Cognitive Abilities Screening Instrument.
Percentages for clinical features are based on numbers of cases with features divided by the total number of cases with available data; cases with missing data for a feature are excluded.
p < 0.005 (Fisher’s exact test).
p < 0.05 (Fisher’s exact test).
p < 0.001 (Wilcoxon rank-sum test).
Association of PD with ever use of pesticides before diagnosis or reference date by mechanism.
| Pesticide | Cases ( | Controls ( | OR (95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oxidative stressors
| ||||
| Paraquat | 23 (24) | 49 (14) | 2.5 (1.4–4.7) | 0.004 |
| Permethrin | 16 (16) | 41 (12) | 1.5 (0.77–2.9) | 0.244 |
| Carbon disulfide | 2 (2) | 3 (1) | 2.6 (0.41–16) | 0.313 |
| Chloranil | 1 (1) | 3 (1) | 1.6 (0.16–16) | 0.706 |
| Cyhalothrin | 1 (1) | 1 (0) | 3.8 (0.22–64) | 0.359 |
| Dichlone | 3 (3) | 8 (2) | 1.6 (0.40–6.2) | 0.517 |
| Mercury compounds | 2 (2) | 5 (1) | 1.4 (0.26–7.5) | 0.692 |
| Pybuthrin | 0 (0) | 6 (2) | NA | |
| Any oxidative stressor | 35 (40) | 93 (28) | 2.0 (1.2–3.6) | 0.012 |
| Mitochondrial complex I inhibitors
| ||||
| Benomyl | 7 (7) | 15 (4) | 1.9 (0.70–5.0) | 0.207 |
| Carbendazim | 1 (1) | 2 (1) | 2.2 (0.19–25) | 0.529 |
| Cyhalothrin | 1 (1) | 1 (0) | 3.8 (0.22–64) | 0.359 |
| Permethrin | 16 (16) | 41 (12) | 1.5 (0.77–2.9) | 0.244 |
| Pyridaben | 0 (0) | 1 (0) | NA | |
| Rotenone | 19 (19) | 32 (9) | 2.5 (1.3–4.7) | 0.005 |
| Thiabendazole | 3 (3) | 12 (3) | 0.8 (0.23–3.1) | 0.778 |
| Any complex I inhibitor | 36 (38) | 92 (27) | 1.7 (1.0–2.8) | 0.041 |
NA, not available. Analyses used logistic regression adjusted for reference age tertile, sex, state, and cigarette smoking.
Clinical features of PD cases by use of paraquat or rotenone or mechanistic group.
| Paraquat
| Any oxidative stressor
| Rotenone
| Any complex I inhibitor
| |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Characteristic | Exposed ( | Not exposed ( | Exposed ( | Not exposed ( | Exposed ( | Not exposed ( | Exposed ( | Not exposed ( |
| Age at PD diagnosis [years (mean ± SD)] | 59 ± 8 | 62 ± 9 | 59 ± 8 | 64 ± 9 | 65 ± 11 | 61 ± 8 | 61 ± 11 | 62 ± 8 |
| PD duration [years (mean ± SD)] | 8.6 ± 6 | 8.4 ± 6 | 8.2 ± 6 | 7.6 ± 5 | 7.7 ± 7 | 8.7 ± 5 | 8.2 ± 6 | 8.5 ± 5 |
| Clinical features [ | ||||||||
| Resting tremor | 21/22 (95) | 66/73 (90) | 31/34 (91) | 49/53 (92) | 17/18 (94) | 75/81 (93) | 32/35 (91) | 54/58 (93) |
| Bradykinesia | 22/23 (96) | 70/74 (95) | 33/35 (94) | 50/53 (94) | 17/19 (89) | 79/82 (96) | 34/36 (94) | 56/59 (95) |
| Rigidity | 23/23 (100) | 72/73 (99) | 33/34 (97) | 50/53 (94) | 18/19 (95) | 80/80 (100) | 34/35 (97) | 58/58 (100) |
| Postural reflex impairment | 10/21 (48) | 43/62 (69) | 18/31 (58) | 29/43 (67) | 7/15 (47) | 48/69 (70) | 16/28 (57) | 37/52 (71) |
| Asymmetric onset | 23/23 (100) | 69/71 (97) | 35/35 (100) | 49/51 (96) | 18/18 (100) | 77/79 (97) | 35/35 (100) | 54/56 (96) |
| Response to dopaminergic therapy (if prescribed) | 21/21 (100) | 63/65 (97) | 30/30 (100) | 46/48 (96) | 14/15 (93) | 73/74 (99) | 30/31 (97) | 53/54 (98) |
Difference between exposed versus not exposed p = 0.02.