| Literature DB >> 21655123 |
Maria E Leon1, Laura E Beane Freeman, Jeroen Douwes, Jane A Hoppin, Hans Kromhout, Pierre Lebailly, Karl-Christian Nordby, Marc Schenker, Joachim Schüz, Stephen C Waring, Michael C R Alavanja, Isabella Annesi-Maesano, Isabelle Baldi, Mohamed Aqiel Dalvie, Giles Ferro, Béatrice Fervers, Hilde Langseth, Leslie London, Charles F Lynch, John McLaughlin, James A Merchant, Punam Pahwa, Torben Sigsgaard, Leslie Stayner, Catharina Wesseling, Keun-Young Yoo, Shelia H Zahm, Kurt Straif, Aaron Blair.
Abstract
AGRICOH is a recently formed consortium of agricultural cohort studies involving 22 cohorts from nine countries in five continents: South Africa (1), Canada (3), Costa Rica (2), USA (6), Republic of Korea (1), New Zealand (2), Denmark (1), France (3) and Norway (3). The aim of AGRICOH, initiated by the US National Cancer Institute (NCI) and coordinated by the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC), is to promote and sustain collaboration and pooling of data to investigate the association between a wide range of agricultural exposures and a wide range of health outcomes, with a particular focus on associations that cannot easily be addressed in individual studies because of rare exposures (e.g., use of infrequently applied chemicals) or relatively rare outcomes (e.g., certain types of cancer, neurologic and auto-immune diseases). To facilitate future projects the need for data harmonization of selected variables is required and is underway. Altogether, AGRICOH provides excellent opportunities for studying cancer, respiratory, neurologic, and auto-immune diseases as well as reproductive and allergic disorders, injuries and overall mortality in association with a wide array of exposures, prominent among these the application of pesticides.Entities:
Keywords: agriculture; cohort studies; consortium, pesticides; occupational exposures
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21655123 PMCID: PMC3108113 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph8051341
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Description of cohorts in AGRICOH.
| Mortality | Cancer Incidence | Respiratory Diseases | Neurologic Diseases | Reproductive Outcome | Allergic Disorders | Injuries | Autoimmune Diseases | CVD | POPULATION | Biological Specimens | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adults | Men | Women | Children | Targeted | ||||||||||||
| Pesticide exposure in emerging farmers, South Africa | 2008–2009; job/residential history, quarterly pesticide exposure journals, biomonitoring | 270 | 180 | 90 | Blood (plasma, RBC), urine | |||||||||||
| Ontario Health Study | 2009–2013; annual record linkage; occupational history; potential for detailed exposure, bio-monitoring in subset [ | 8,200 | ≥150,000 | Blood and urine | ||||||||||||
| New Grain Workers’ Study, Canada | 1980–1981; every 2 yrs until 1985 [ | 335 | ||||||||||||||
| Grain dust medical surveillance programme, Canada | 1978–1993; every 3 yrs; number of years in the grain industry; practice of dust control in elevators [ | 20,831 | Buccal smear | |||||||||||||
| Cancer in workers in banana plantations in Costa Rica | Banana plantation employment in 1972–1979; follow-up 1981–1992; duration employment [ | 34,457 | 29,565 | 4,892 | ||||||||||||
| Infants and Environmental Health, Costa Rica | 2010–2011; baseline at pregnancy, follow-ups: 12 and 24 months. Question-naire, bio-monitoring | 350 | 350 | 450 | Blood; urine; hair; milk. Child: blood; urine | |||||||||||
| Farmers Health Study, USA | 1993–2004; 2 follow-ups: 1998, 2004. Questionnaires; dust level validation [ | 1,947 | 1,751 | 196 | ||||||||||||
| MICASA Study, USA | 2006–2007; follow-ups: 2008–2009, 2009–2010, 2011–2012, occupational history, questionnaire | 843 | 422 | 421 | ||||||||||||
| Next Generation Cohort of Agricultural Health Study, USA | 1975–1999; parental exposure as reported via questionnaire [ | 18,263 | 17,114 | 35,414 | To enroll birth years 2000–2009 | Buccal cells in 45% of parents | ||||||||||
| KEOKUK County Rural Health, USA | 1994–2011; 2 follow-ups, job histories, occupational surveys, questionnaire, environment sampling [ | 3,002 | 1,426 | 1,576 | In round 3: Buccal cells; blood; saliva | |||||||||||
| AHS private and commercial applicators, USA | 1993–1997; 2 follow-ups, questionnaires, including exposure to 50 pesticides; environment sampling [ | 52,394 private, 4,916 commercial applicators | 55,748 applicators and 219 spouses | 32,127 spouses and 1,562 applicators | Buccal cells on 40% | |||||||||||
| The Marshfield Epidemiologic Study Area (MESA) Farm Cohort, USA | 1991–2010; passive follow-up; farming exposures actively collected on a per project basis [ | 5,487 | 2,891 | 2,596 | Banked DNA, serum, plasma in some adults | |||||||||||
| Korean Multi-center Cancer Cohort | 1993–2004; 1 follow-up; exposure to pesticides through questionnaires[ | 19,688 | 7,916 | 11,772 | Plasma, serum, buffy, RBC, urine | |||||||||||
| Environmental exposures and asthma risk in babies born in farms, New Zealand | 2007–2012; 3 follow-ups, exposures and job history by questionnaire, dust indoor sampling | ∼700 | ∼700 | 800 | Blood (serum) from child | |||||||||||
| Asthma and atopyin farmer's children and their parents, New Zealand | 2001–2003; exposures, job history by questionnaire, dust and water sampling [ | 5,616 | 1,899 | |||||||||||||
| SUS Study, Denmark | 1992–1994; 5 follow-ups, exposures by questionnaire; dust and LPS sampling [ | 2,371 407 conscripts | 1,734 | 230 | Blood (serum, buffy) | |||||||||||
| FERMA, France | 2006 and 2008; no follow-up completed to date; questionnaire, air sampling, bio-monitoring [ | 504 | 300 | 2000 | Blood, saliva, urine | |||||||||||
| AGRICAN, France | 2005–2007; first follow-up in 2012–2014; exposures by questionnaire | 187,471 | 103,135 | 84,336 | Blood (serum, buffy, RBC), urine in 750 | |||||||||||
| PHYTONER, France | 1997–1998; 2 follow-ups, first during 2001–2003. Job calendars, questionnaire at enrollment[ | 918 | 739 | 179 | ||||||||||||
| The Janus Serum Bank | 1973–2004; continuous follow-up for cancer. Occupation from census data; smoking from Nat. Inst. Public Health linkage[ | 316,951 | 165,390 | 151,561 | Blood (serum) | |||||||||||
| Cancer in the Norwegian agricultural population, Norway | 1969–1989; data from agricultural census; farm production records, meteo and fungal forecasts [ | 137,000 | 111,000 | 323,000 | Members can be nested in Janus | |||||||||||
| Norway Farmer Cohort | 1990–1992; farms visited in 1992–1996; farming tasks and other from questionnaires; personal dust samples [ | 8,482 | 5,564 | 2,918 | Blood (serum) | |||||||||||
Investigators and affiliation
General population cohort encompassing a significant number of agricultural populations or having potential to oversample agricultural areas
CVD: Cardiovascular diseases
LPS: Lipopolysaccharides
RBC: Red blood cells
Leslie London, Mohamed Aqiel Dalvie and colleagues, University of Cape Town, South Africa
John McLaughlin, Lyle Palmer, Paul Demers and Ontario Institute for Cancer Research, Cancer Care Ontario, Canada
Punam Pahwa and colleagues, University of Saskatchewan, Canada
Catharina Wesseling, Universidad Nacional, Heredia, Costa Rica
Berna van Wendel, Catharina Wesseling and colleagues, Universidad Nacional, Heredia, Costa Rica
Marc B. Schenker University of California at Davis, USA
Chuck Lynch, Paul Romitti, Michael Alavanja, Jane Hoppin, University of Iowa, U.S. National Cancer Institute, U.S. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, USA
James Merchant, University of Iowa, USA
Michael Alavanja, Laura Beane Freeman, Dale Sandler, Jane Hoppin, U.S. National Cancer Institute, U.S. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, USA
Stephen Waring and colleagues at Marshfield Clinic Research Foundation, USA
Keun-Young Yoo, Hai-Rim Shin and colleagues at Seoul National University, Republic of Korea
Jeroen Douwes and colleagues, Massey University, New Zealand
Torben Sigsgaard and colleagues at Aarhus University, Denmark
Isabella Annesi-Maesano and Denis Caillaud, INSERM-Paris, CHU de Clermont-Ferrand, France
Pierre Lebailly and Isabelle Baldi, Centre F. Baclesse in Caen, University of Bordeaux, France
Isabelle Baldi, University of Bordeaux, France
Hilde Langseth and Kristina Kjærheim, Cancer Registry of Norway, Norway
Karl-Christian Nordby and Petter Kristensen National Institute of Occupational Health, Norway
Helge Kjuus and Wijnand Eduard, National Institute of Occupational Health, Norway