Literature DB >> 9886160

Correlation analysis of pesticide use data and cancer incidence rates in California counties.

P K Mills1.   

Abstract

California, the leading agricultural state in the United States, has maintained a population-based cancer registry since 1988, and it also maintains a comprehensive, state-wide pesticide reporting system. Data on cancer incidence and pesticide use reporting are available, by county, for all 58 counties in California. Average annual age-adjusted cancer incidence rates (1988-1992), on a county-, sex-, and race/ethnicity-specific basis, were obtained from the California Cancer Registry (CCR), which maintains the population-based cancer registry throughout California. Pesticide use data (i.e., pounds of active ingredient applied annually in each county) were obtained from the California Department of Pesticide Regulation for 1993. Investigators used Pearson product-moment correlation coefficients (r) to correlate age-adjusted incidence rates for selected cancers with the use data for selected pesticides. For most sex- and race/ethnicity-specific groups, the correlation coefficients were very close to zero or negative in sign, indicating no correlation between pesticide use and cancer incidence. There were, however, several exceptions, particularly in Hispanic males for whom the following correlations were observed: leukemia and atrazine (r=.40), leukemia and 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (r=.41), leukemia and captan (r=.46), atrazine and brain cancer (r=.54), and atrazine and testicular cancer (r=.41). For black males, we observed the following: atrazine and prostate cancer (r=.67) and Captan and prostate cancer (r=.49). In females, only a few of the correlations were elevated. Although most of the correlations examined in this analysis were not elevated, several of those in the Hispanic and black male populations were. These segments of the population have traditionally been employed as farm workers in California and have had the greatest potential for exposure to pesticides. This was an ecological study for which no data about exposure to pesticides at the individual level were available for analysis. In addition, no latency period was allowed between potential exposure and diagnosis with cancer. However, the results obtained in two minority groups who represented the majority of farm workers in the fields suggested that additional research studies, in which more rigorous study designs are used, should be conducted in those groups.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9886160     DOI: 10.1080/00039899809605729

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arch Environ Health        ISSN: 0003-9896


  18 in total

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2.  Personal air sampling and risks of inhalation exposure during atrazine application in Honduras.

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4.  Prostate cancer and ambient pesticide exposure in agriculturally intensive areas in California.

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5.  Prostate cancer among pesticide applicators: a meta-analysis.

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8.  Occupational risk factors for selected cancers among African American and White men in the United States.

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9.  Childhood cancer and agricultural pesticide use: an ecologic study in California.

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10.  Developing a comprehensive pesticide health effects tracking system for an urban setting: New York City's approach.

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