Feds hedge on environmental link to Pennsylvania illnesses
Dee Lewis on Dec 8th 2007
| 12/7/2007, 4:32 p.m. ESTBy MIKE STOBBE and MICHAEL RUBINKAM
The Associated Press |
ATLANTA (AP) — Officials abruptly backpedaled Friday on a federally funded health study that suggests an environmental link to a cluster of rare blood cancer cases in northeastern Pennsylvania, saying an abstract that made the claim was mistakenly released to the public.The research is to be presented Monday at a medical conference in Atlanta. An abstract released in advance of the meeting said there is “significant evidence” that something in the environment caused an unusually large number of cases of polycythemia (pah-lee-sy-
The abstract, which was submitted to the American Society of Hematology, also said that people who had lived within 13 miles of a former toxic waste dump in northern Schuylkill County developed the blood cancer at a rate 4.5 times higher than people living in other parts of the three counties.
Steve Dearwent, a government epidemiologist, said Friday that the abstract was written early in the summer and that subsequent analysis of the data did not support the conclusion of an environmental link — although he added that still is a possibility. He said the abstract should have been revised before it was submitted.
“We’re going to have to retract the abstract to correct the record because it is erroneous information,
Dearwent said additional research might prove an environmental link. And the study’s lead researcher, Dr. Ronald Hoffman of the Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York, said Friday that the data does in fact point to something in the environment.
“Based upon the data, there’s significant concern that there is something in the environment leading to the development of polycythemia vera in that area. The nature of what’s causing it is unknown at the moment and is going to require further study,” he said.
Dante Picciano, a lawyer and geneticist who is active in local environmental issues, said the data indicate a much larger problem than polycythemia vera. He wants study of a wide range of cancers and other diseases in the region.
“This is the tip of the iceberg. It’s inconceivable that you’re going to have environmental exposures cause an increase in (only) one type of rare cancer,” he said.
Polycythemia vera, classified as a cancer, can lead to heart attack or stroke. About 1 case of polycythemia vera occurs each year in every 100,000 Americans. The cause is unknown.
Local activists have raised suspicions about McAdoo Associates, about 80 miles northwest of Philadelphia, where a hazardous waste recycling business operated from 1975 to 1979 and accepted hundreds of thousands of gallons of paint sludge, waste oils, used solvents, PCBs, cyanide, pesticides and many other known or suspected carcinogens.
Environmental officials shut down the site in 1979, and it was later placed on the federal Superfund list and cleaned up.
Residents fear that chemicals leached into the region’s water supplies and polluted private wells and public reservoirs. State and federal environmental officials have said for years that McAdoo Associates does not pose a health threat.http://www.pennlive
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