| Literature DB >> 22876750 |
Carol J Burns1, Gerard M H Swaen.
Abstract
A qualitative review of the epidemiological literature on the herbicide 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-D) and health after 2001 is presented. In order to compare the exposure of the general population, bystanders and occupational groups, their urinary levels were also reviewed. In the general population, 2,4-D exposure is at or near the level of detection (LOD). Among individuals with indirect exposure, i.e. bystanders, the urinary 2,4-D levels were also very low except in individuals with opportunity for direct contact with the herbicide. Occupational exposure, where exposure was highest, was positively correlated with behaviors related to the mixing, loading and applying process and use of personal protection. Information from biomonitoring studies increases our understanding of the validity of the exposure estimates used in epidemiology studies. The 2,4-D epidemiology literature after 2001 is broad and includes studies of cancer, reproductive toxicity, genotoxicity, and neurotoxicity. In general, a few publications have reported statistically significant associations. However, most lack precision and the results are not replicated in other independent studies. In the context of biomonitoring, the epidemiology data give no convincing or consistent evidence for any chronic adverse effect of 2,4-D in humans.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22876750 PMCID: PMC3483058 DOI: 10.3109/10408444.2012.710576
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Rev Toxicol ISSN: 1040-8444 Impact factor: 5.635
General population, no a priori exposure, in µg/L (ppb).
| Selected percentiles | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Source | Group | Number of subjects | LOD | % < LOD | 25th | GM (AM) | 50th | 75th | Max |
| Centers for Disease Control and Prevention | US 2001-2 population, Ages 6–59 | 2413 | 0.2 | NR | <LOD | NC | <LOD | <1 | 95th = 1.3 |
| Canadian population, Ages 6–79 | 5480 | NR | 95 | <LOD | NC | <LOD | <LOD | 95th < LOD | |
| US adults | 983 | 1 | 88 | <LOD | (<1) | <LOD | <LOD | 37 | |
| NC adults | 66 | 0.2 | 14 | <1 | NR | <1 | 1 | 5 | |
| OH adults | 69 | 0.2 | 13 | <1 | NR | 1 | 1 | 8 | |
| NC children | 66 | 0.2 | 12 | <1 | NR | <1 | 1 | 3 | |
| OH children | 69 | 0.2 | 3 | <1 | NR | 1 | 2 | 13 | |
| Tailand children | 207 | 0.5 | 83 | NR | <1 (<1) | <1 | NR | 3 | |
AM, arithmetic mean; GM, geometric mean; LOD, limit of detection; NC, not calculated; NR, not reported.
Bystanders and rural populations, source of exposure expected to be indirect, in µg/L (ppb).
| Selected percentiles | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Source | Group | Number of subjects | LOD | % < LOD | 25th | GM (AM) | 50th | 75th | Max | Comment |
| Crop applicator, pre-application | 34 | 1.0 | 30 | NR | 4 | 2 | NR | 231 | ||
| Children of applicator day 2 | 52 | 1.0 | 11 | NR | 4 | 3 | NR | 263 | 20 children were present during the application process, 4 had opportunity for direct contact. | |
| Spouses of applicator day 2 | 34 | 1.0 | 32 | NR | 1 | 1 | NR | 25 | 8 spouses were present during the application process, 1 had opportunity for direct contact. | |
| Crop applicator did not use 2,4-D | 83 | 1.0 | NR | <LOD | 1 | <LOD | 1 | 66 | ||
| Children of applicator day 2 | 92 | 1.0 | 86 | NR | (1.9) | NR | <LOD | 100 | Child with highest concentration was directly involved in the handling of the herbicide. | |
| Spouses of applicator day 2 | 125 | 1.0 | 86 | NR | 1(2) | <LOD | <LOD | 100 | Spouse with the highest concentration helped with the handling of the herbicide | |
| Children of farm worker | 60 | 0.2 | 58 | NR | NR | <1 | NR | NR | Only % detected reported | |
| Farm worker | 196 (784 samples) | 0.2 | 2 | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | Only % detected reported, 4 samples per person, 30% had all 4 detections | |
| Crop applicator of atrazine, Pre season | 30 (61 samples) | 0.2 | 16 | <LOD | 1(3) | NR | NR | NR | 90th percentile = 4 | |
| Crop applicator of atrazine, planting season | 30 (157 samples) | 0.2 | 4 | NR | 3(23) | NR | NR | NR | 90th percentile = 67 | |
| Extension agent, all seasons | 10 (49 samples) | 0.2 | 53 | <LOD | <1(<1) | NR | NR | NR | 90th percentile = 2 | |
| Farm worker at pregnancy delivery | 9 | 20 | 89 | NR | NR | NR | NR | 120 | ||
| Crop applicator, did not use 2,4-D | 27 | 0.2 | 30 | <LOD | <1 | NR | NR | NR | ||
| Farmer, 2,4-D sprayed by others | 4 | 0.2 | 0 | NR | 2 | NR | NR | NR | ||
| Nonfarmer | 45 | 0.2 | 31 | <LOD | <1 | NR | NR | NR | ||
| Licensed applicator, did not apply | 15 | 0.6 | 80 | <LOD | (0.5) | <LOD | <LOD | 2 | ||
| Household members, turf application, did not apply 2,4-D | 19 | NR | 100 | <LOD | <LOD | <LOD | <LOD | <LOD | A controlled study | |
| Crop applicator (Pon Yaeng) did not use 2,4-D | 67 | 0.2 | 91 | <LOD | NC | <LOD | <LOD | 30 | ||
| Crop applicator, (Inthakhin), not timed with application | 69 | 0.2 | 35 | <LOD | <1 | <1 | 3 | 598 | ||
AM, arithmetic mean; GM, geometric mean; LOD, limit of detection; NC, not calculated; NR, not reported.
Applicators, source of exposure expected to be direct, in µg/L (ppb).
| Selected percentiles | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Source | Group | Number of subjects | LOD | % < LOD | 25th | GM (AM) | 50th | 75th | Max | Comment |
| Crop applicator, Day 2 | 34 | 1 | 3 | 13 | 45 | 80 | 145 | 2236 | Levels associated with glove use, repairing equipment and acres treated. | |
| Crop applicator, Day 1 | 43 | 1 | 52 | 1 | 5 | 6 | 13 | 410 | Levels associated with protective gear, application equipment, handling practice, and personal hygiene practice. | |
| Seasonal applicator | 31 (136 samples) | 1 | NR | 63(259) | 94 | 2857 | 16% of between worker variance explained by method, month, concentration, gloves | |||
| Crop applicator | 16 | 0.2 | 6 | 13 | Levels associated with time since application, amount applied, and acres treated | |||||
| Forestry applicator | 24 | 0.6 | 1 | 20 | 49 | 61 | 145 | 1700 | Levels associated with application method | |
| Turf home applicators; granular, unprotected | 11 | 4 | 1/11 | <LOD | (9.8) | <LOD | <LOD | 108 | ||
| Turf home applicators; granular, unprotected | 9 | 4 | 1/9 | <LOD | (19) | <LOD | <LOD | 169 | ||
| Turf home applicators; liquid, unprotected | 11 | 4 | 2/11 | <LOD | (9) | <LOD | <LOD | 63 | ||
| Turf home applicators; liquid, unprotected | 9 | 4 | 6/9 | 85 | (204) | 111 | 289 | 744 | ||
| Turf applicators 24-h urine samples | 135 (513 samples) | 42 | 15 | 3658 | ||||||
| Manufacturers, 1985–1986, | 41 | 1 | 0 | 332 | (1345) | 731 | 1391 | 12,963 | Within frst two hours of working shift (Friday) | |
| Crop applicator, Day 3 | 2 | 0.5 | 0 | (1317) | 2480 | |||||
| Forestry applicator, Pilot, Day 1 | 1 | 0.5 | 0 | NA | NA | NA | NA | 52 | ||
| Forestry, mixer-loader, Day 1 | 1 | 0.5 | 0 | NA | NA | NA | NA | 365 | ||
| Crop applicator | 32 | NR | NR | NR | (9000) | NR | NR | NR | Poor information on methods | |
| Crop applicator, not timed with application | 45 | 35 | <LOD | <1 | <1 | 3 | 598 | |||
| Crop applicator, Day 5 | 26 | 0.2 | 0 | NR | 17 | NR | NR | 2500 | Lower GM levels associated with glove use and application method. | |
AM, arithmetic mean; GM, geometric mean; LOD, limit of detection.
Carcinogenicity: summary of findings of 2,4-D exposure and cancer.
| Author, year | Design | Exposure | Exposed cases | Results | Comments/conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nested C–C | Applied 2,4-D (self report) | NR | Data not shown | No signifcant increase, AHS Very large sample size (566 cases, 54 766 controls) | |
| Nested C–C | Ever exposed to 2,4-D (self report and job exposure matrix) | 11 | OR = 2.72 (1.12–6.57) | Results inconsistent. | |
| Cohort | Worked in chlorophenoxy | Hazard ratios for Factory A: | No signifcant increase | ||
| All cancers | manufacturing | 81 | All cancers: 1.31 (0.86–2.01) | Moderate cohort (Factory A = 539 exposed, 18 811 person years and Factory B = 411 exposed, 12 946 person years) | |
| NHL | 4 | NHL: 0.92 (0.19–4.47) (1 case in Factory B) | Not specifc to 2,4-D, exposures include 2,4,5-T, MCPA, other pesticides and possibly TCDD. | ||
| Stomach | 5 | Stomach: 2.23 sibly TCDD. (0.38–13.20) | |||
| Melanoma | 3 | Melanoma: 0.72 (0.07–7.03) | |||
| Prostate | 6 | Prostate: 2.93 (0.61–14.15) | |||
| Cohort | Worked in 2,4-D | SIR for Cohort 2 | No signifcant increase | ||
| All cancers | manufacturing | 244 | All cancers: 0.88 (0.78–1.00) | Signifcant defcit of prostate cancer | |
| NHL | 14 | NHL 1.36 (0.74–2.29) 14 cases | Other exposure include benzene, asbestos and possibly TCDD | ||
| Stomach | 4 | Stomach: 0.85 (0.23–2.18) | Moderate cohort of 1256 workers, 23 354 person years) | ||
| Melanoma | 9 | Melanoma: 1.06 (0.48–2.01) | |||
| Brain cancer | 3 | Brain: 0.87 (0.17–2.54) | |||
| Prostate | 62 | Prostate: 0.74 (0.57–0.94) | |||
| C-C | Exposed to 2,4-D on a farm (self-report) | 24 | OR = 0.9 (0.5–1.6) including proxy | No signifcant increase | |
| Glioma | 11 | OR = 0.8 (0.4–1.6) excluding proxy | Moderate sample size (341 cases, 527 controls) | ||
| C–C | Used phenoxy herbicides (self-report) | T(14:18) positive No use: OR = 5.0 (1.2–20.8) | Results inconsistent. Not specifc to 2,4-D | ||
| 14 | Used: OR = 2.9 (1.0–8.4) | Risk from no use higher than risk of use | |||
| Used OR = 0.8 (0.4–1.6) | |||||
| C–C NHL | Used 2,4-D (self-report) | 123 | OR = 0.9 (0.6–1.2) | No signifcant increase | |
| Nested C–C Melanoma | Applied 2,4-D (self report) | NR | data not shown | No signifcant increase, AHS Very large sample size (150 cases and 24 554 noncases) | |
| Nested C–C Breast cancer | Applied 2,4-D (self report) | 41 | Adj RR 0.8 (0.6–1.1) (also by state and menopausal status) | No signifcant increase, AHS Very large sample size (309 cases, 30 145 noncases) | |
| C-C | Used 2,4-D and/or 2,4,5-T (self-report) | 33 | Multivariate OR = 1.24 (0.68–2.26) | No signifcant increase | |
| NHL and specifc entities | 21 | OR = 2.08 (0.99–4.38) for ≤ 29 days | Large sample size (910 cases, 1016 controls) | ||
| 12 | OR = 1.33 (0.57–3.13) for >29 days. | Signifcant results for phenoxy herbicides driven by MCPA results. | |||
| Nested C–C | Parent used 2,4-D (self-report by parent) | 7 | Mother used OR = 0.72 (0.32–1.60) | No signifcant increase, AHS | |
| Cancer in children | 26 | Father used OR = 1.29 (0.71-2.35) | Large sample size (17 280 children) 50 cancer cases, 2 NHL cases | ||
| C-C | 2,4-D in carpet dust | 257 | OR = 1.10 (0.78–1.55) <500 ng/g in dust | No signifcant increase | |
| NHL | 86 | OR = 0.91 (0.58-1.45) 500-999 ng/g | Large sample size (1321 cases, 1057 controls; with dust 679 cases, 510 controls) | ||
| 165 | OR = 0.66 (0.45-0.98) 1000-9999 ng/g | ||||
| 24 | OR = 0.82 (0.41-1.66) >10,000 ng/g | ||||
| C-C | Used 2,4-D (self-report) | 49 | 2,4-D alone OR = 0.94 (0.67-1.33) | Risk only in combination | |
| NHL | 61 | Malathion and 2,4-D OR = 2.06 (1.45–2.93) | Large sample size (513 cases, 1506 controls) | ||
| C-C | Used 2,4-D (self-report) | 172 | Non asthmatics OR = 1.0 (0.8-1.3) | No signifcant increase | |
| NHL | 17 | Asthmatics OR = 1.3 (0.7–2.5) | Large sample size (872 cases, 2381 controls) | ||
| C-C | Used 2,4-D (self report) | 25 | Proxy OR = 3.3 (1.5–7.2) | Potential recall bias in proxies | |
| Glioma | 7 | Self OR = 0.6 (0.2–1.6) | Moderate sample size (251 cases, 498 controls) | ||
| C-C | Used 2,4-D (self-report) | 27 | Stomach OR = 0.8 (0.4–1.3) | No signifcant increase | |
| Stomach, Oesophagus | 20 | Oesophagus OR = 0.7 (0.4–1.2) | Moderate sample size (170 stomach, 137 oesophagus, 502 controls) | ||
| Nested | Used 2,4-D (self-report) | 135 | Colon OR = 0.6 (0.4–0.8), also signifcant by lifetime exposure days ( | Signifcant inverse association for colon, AHS | |
| C-C Colorectal | 69 | Rectum OR = 1.1 (0.6–2.0) | Very large sample size (305 cases, 56 508 noncases) | ||
| C-C | Used 2,4-D (self report) | 111 | Adj OR = 1.32 (1.01-1.73) | Results inconsistent | |
| NHL | More than 10 hours per year | No dose response by days per year Conditional, most parsimonious model excluded phenoxy herbicides. | Large sample size (517 cases, 1506 controls) | ||
| C-C | Used 2,4-D (self-report) | 37 | Exp to 2,4-D, no DEET OR = 1.05 | No signifcant increase | |
| C-C | Exposed to 2,4-D (Expert assessment from self-report) | 6 | Men OR = 0.7 (0.3–1.9) | No signifcant increase | |
| NHL | 7 | Women OR = 1.5 (0.4–5.7) | Large sample size (1575 cases, 1232 controls) | ||
| C-C | Exposed to 2,4-D (Expert assessment from self-report) | 17 | Overall OR = 0.9 (0.5-1.8) | Results imprecise | |
| NHL | 9 | Lack of protective equipment OR = 4.4 (1.1–29.1) | Large sample size (1925 cases, 1232 controls) | ||
| C-C | Work records matched with use registry | Cases diagnosed <1995 | Results inconsistent by diagnosis date. OR's similar for low and high use. | ||
| Breast cancer | 12 | OR = 0.61 (0.20–1.86) for low use | Exposure subject to misclassifcation: assumed from working in felds but metrics not timed with application and entry. | ||
| 8 | OR = 0.62 (0.23-1.69) for high use Cases diagnosed ≥1995 | Moderate sample size (128 cases, 640 controls) | |||
| 19 | OR = 2.16 (0.95–4.93) for low use | ||||
| 21 | OR = 2.14 (1.06–4.32) for high use | ||||
| C-C | Work records matched with use registry | NR | NHL High (v Low) OR = 3.8 (1.85-7.81) | Results imprecise (only 15% exposed to 2,4-D) | |
| NHL, MM, Leukemia | NHL extranodal OR = 9.73 (2.68–35.3) | Exposure subject to misclassifcation: assumed from working in felds but metrics not timed with application and entry. | |||
| NHL males OR = 3.79 (1.58–9.11) | Moderate sample size (60 NHL, 51 leukemia, 20 MM cases and 5 controls per case) | ||||
| C-C | Work records matched with use registry | 17 | Signifcant at lowest pounds of use | Results inconsistent for reference and no dose response. | |
| Gastric (stomach) cancer | 14 | OR = 2.16 (1.02-4.56) for 1–14 lbs | Moderate sample size (100 cases, 210 controls) | ||
| 11 | OR = 1.57 (0.71–3.51) for 15–86 lbs | Exposure subject to misclassifcation: assumed from working in felds but metrics not timed with application and entry. | |||
| C-C | Used 2,4-D (self report) | 57 | HL OR = 0.96 (0.67–1.37) | No signifcant increase | |
| HL, MM, STS | More than 10 hours per year | 80 | MM OR = 1.21 (0.89–1.65) | Large sample size (316 HL, 342 MM, 357 STS, 1506 controls) | |
| 69 | STS OR = 0.97 (0.71–1.32) | ||||
| C-C | Used phenoxy herbicides (self report) | 17 | T (14:18) positive OR = 0.9 (0.5–1.5) | No signifcant increase | |
| NHL specifc entities | 30 | T (14:18) negative OR = 1.1 (0.7–1.5) | Not specifc to 2,4-D Large sample size (622 cases, 182 cases with translocation status, 1245 controls) |
Same population.
C–C, case–control study; HL, Hodgkin lymphoma; MM, Multiple myeloma; NR, not reported; STS, soft tissue sarcoma.
Case–control size: Very large (>10 000); Large (>1000); Moderate (>100). Cohorts small (<10 000 person years at risk).
Reproductive toxicity: summary of findings of 2,4-D exposure and reproductive endpoints.
| Author | Design | Exposure | Exposed cases | Results | Comment/conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nested C–C Spontaneous abortion (SAB) | Used 2,4-D in farming during pregnancy period | 26 | <12 weeks gestation | Results inconsistent | |
| 9 | Post conception exposure OR = 0.6 (0.3–1.2) | Related analysis of | |||
| 22v5 | Pre vs. Post OR = 2.9 (1.1–8.0) | ||||
| 11v14 | 12–19 weeks, Pre vs. Post OR = 0.5 (0.2–1.1) | ||||
| Nested C–C | Urinary 2,4-D (≥0.1 µg/g cr) | 5 | Low semen quality OR = 0.8 (0.2–3.0) (Missouri, no exposed cases in Minnesota) | No significant increase | |
| Semen quality | Concentration, morphology, % motile (all | Small sample size (65 cases and 101 controls with semen samples) | |||
| C–C | 2,4-D in surface water (>70 µg/L) | NR | OR = 1.05 (0.81–1.37) <10 km to water | No significant increase | |
| Gastroschisis (birth deffect) | Large sample size (805 cases, 3616 controls) | ||||
| Nested C–C | Used 2,4-D in farming during pregnancy period | In ofspring: | Significant only for hayfever/allergies | ||
| Allergies, hayfever in ofspring | 21 | Bronchitis OR = 1.46 (0.80–2.66) | Large sample size (805 children) | ||
| 24 | Asthma OR = 0.74 (0.38–1.43) | Since a farming family, exposure not restricted to in utero. | |||
| 52 | Hayfever/allergies OR = 1.66 (1.11–2.49) | ||||
| Nested C–C | Used 2,4-D in farming during pregnancy period | 7 | Any deffect OR = 0.97 (0.42–2.25) | No significant increase | |
| Birth deffects | 6 | Pre-conception OR = 0.60 (0.25–1.46) | Large sample size (118 malformation in 3412 pregnancies |
Same cohort.
C–C, case–control study; NR, not reported.
Genotoxicity: summary of findings of 2,4-D exposure and genetic, hormone, and immune related endpoints.
| Author | Design | Exposure | Exposed cases | Results | Comments/conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cross sectional | Urinary 2,4-D in farmer applicators | 12 | Micronuclei scores, lymphocyte phenotypes, blood counts not significant. | Results inconsistent | |
| Micronuclei, replicative index (RI), lymphocyte phenotypes, complete blood counts | Replicative index (RI) | Only RI significant before/after and appl/control, no dose response | |||
| Before/after ( | Small sample size (12 applicators, 9 controls) | ||||
| Cross sectional | Urinary 2,4-D and work records | 21 | LH correlated with urinary levels ( | Small sample size (24 applicators, 15 controls) | |
| Hormone levels, chromosomes aberrations | FSH, testosterone, chromo-some aberrations not cor-related with urinary levels V(D)J rearrangement frequency correlated with urinary levels by application method | Exposure according to application method | |||
| Cross sectional Antinuclear antibodies (ANA) | Used 2,4-D (occupational) | 50 | OR = 0.70 (0.27–1.77) ANA + OR = 0.30 (0.11–0.86), men only | No significant increase Moderate sample size ( |
aSame cohort.
Neurotoxicity.
| Author, year | Endpoint | Exposure | Exposed Cases | Results | Comments/conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| C–C | Used 2,4-D | 17 | OR = 1.2 (0.6–2.8) | No significant increase | |
| Parkinson's disease | Moderate sample size (100 cases, 84 controls) | ||||
| Nested C–C | Used 2,4-D | 47 | OR = 0.9 (0.5–1.8) prevalent | No significant increase, AHS | |
| Parkinson's disease | 49 | OR = 1.0 (0.5–2.1) incident | Very large sample size (83 prevalent cases, 78 incident cases, 79 557 controls) | ||
| C–C | Used chorphenoxy acid/ester | 15 | OR = 2.07 (0.69–6.23) | No significant increase | |
| Parkinson's disease | Large sample size (319 cases, 296 controls) | ||||
| Parkinsonism | Used 2,4-D | 16 | OR = 2.59 (1.03–6. 48) No association by duration of use | Results inconsistent Moderate sample size (519 cases, 511 controls) | |
| Nested C–C | Used 2,4-D | 76 | OR = 1.2 (0.57–2.4) | No significant increase, AHS | |
| Parkinson's disease | Moderate sample size (110 cases, 358 controls) |
Same cohort.
C–C, case–control study.
General toxicity.
| Author | Endpoint | Exposure | Exposed cases | Results | Comments/Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nested C–C | Used 2,4-D in private farming and commercial application | NR | Farmers OR = 0.97 (0.86–1.10) | No signifcant increase, AHS | |
| Nested C–C | Used 2,4-D in farming | 2395 | OR = 0.99 (0.88-1.11) | No signifcant increase, AHS | |
| Wheeze | 77 | OR = 1.25 (0.83–1.90) at highest use (>40 days) | Very large sample size (3838 cases, 16 630 controls) | ||
| Nested C–C | Used 2,4-D in commercial application | 225 | Current use OR = 1.27 (0.96-1.68) | No signifcant increase, AHS | |
| Nested C–C | Used phenoxy | 363 | OR = 1.12 (0.77-1.64) | No signifcant increase, AHS | |
| Nested C–C | Used 2,4-D in farming | 78 | OR = 1.10 (0.90-1.35) | No signifcant increase, AHS | |
| Nested C–C | Used 2,4-D in farming, women only | 52 | Atopic asthma OR = 1.53 (1.12–2.10) | Signifcant increase, AHS | |
| Asthma | 66 | Nonatopic OR 1.07 (0.82–1.41) | Very large sample size (282 atopic asthma, 420 nonatopic, 3086 atopy, 25,112 controls) | ||
| 477 | Growing up on farm OR = 0.55 (0.43–0.70) | OR > 1 for most pesticides reported | |||
| Cross sectional HDL, triglycerides, non-HDL, insulin, C-peptide, plasma glucose, thyroid stimulating hormone | Urinary levels in US population (> LOD) | 102 | Decreasing HDL ( | Only 14% above LOD | |
| Increasing triglycerides ( | Moderate sample size ( | ||||
| Nested C–C Rhinitis (stufy, itchy, or runny nose in past 12 months) | Used 2,4-D as a commercial applicator | 750 | OR = 1.34 (1.09-1.64) | Results inconsistent, no dose response, AHS | |
| Chronic bronchitis | Used 2,4-D in farming, women only | 93 | OR = 1.29 (1.02-1.63) adj for age, state | Results attenuate with modeling, AHS |
Same cohort.
C–C, case–control study; NR, not reported.
Figure 1Relative risk estimates, lower and upper limits for epidemiology studies of NHL from 1989 to 2011. (See colour version of this figure online at www.informahealthcare.com/txc)
Comparison of results in an epidemiology study.
| Group | OR | 95% CI | Statistically significant | CI ratio |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Men | 0.7 | 0.3–1.9 | No | 6.3 |
| Women | 1.5 | 0.4-5.7 | No | 14.3 |
| Overall | 0.9 | 0.5-1.8 | No | 3.6–most precise |
| Lack of protective equipment | 4.4 | 1.1-29.1 | Yes | 26.0–least stable |
From Miligi et al. (2003, 2006).