Archive for November, 2008

Cancer study triggers debate

clustera on Nov 4th 2008

 

Cape Cod Times

Cancer study triggers debate

A longtime skeptic of the Air Force’s PAVE PAWS early warning station in Sagamore has set his sights on the state health department.

Dr. Richard Albanese, a physician who works for the Air Force, claims a recent state Department of Public Health (DPH) study that ruled out the radar station as a primary cause of a rare cancer cluster among children on Cape Cod was flawed.

State health department officials and others say the study was scientifically legitimate.

The 11-month, $40,000 study compared the strength of the radar’s beam that is hitting the homes of the sick children with sites that were not associated with someone who had been diagnosed with Ewing’s sarcoma.

Albanese claims the study had a pre-determined outcome because of the way the research was designed.

Albanese, who worked on the original military panel that cleared PAVE PAWS for operation in 1979 but has since grown wary of the radar station, takes issue with several aspects of the study. His biggest concern is that the comparison sites state investigators used in the study were at similar elevation and distance from the radar station as the homes of the sick children.

Because like was compared to like, the measurements were predictably similar, Albanese said.

For the study to have been done properly, random comparison sites — at different elevations and distances from the radar station — should have been conducted, Albanese said during a phone interview from his Texas home. Albanese emphasized he was commenting on the DPH study as a private citizen.

“It’s a profound error,” he said. “The study has limited to no utility.”

The DPH study, released in December, concluded it was unlikely that PAVE PAWS was the main cause of 14 local cases of Ewing’s sarcoma, a rare bone cancer, since 1982.

The study focused on eight individuals — seven children and one adult — diagnosed between 1995 and 2004. The expected number of cases on Cape Cod during that time is two.

According to the American Cancer Society, the expected incidence rate of the disease is 2.9 cases in 1 million people. There are slightly fewer than 50,000 children under 21 in Barnstable County, according to the 2004 Census.

Broadcast Signal Lab of Cambridge was hired last year to take the radar-beam power measurements for the DPH study. Broadcast Signal Lab technicians took measurements at the homes of the 14 people diagnosed with Ewing’s sarcoma since 1982. They also took measurements at 17 comparison sites at similar elevation and distance from PAVE PAWS as the homes.

Albanese likened the DPH study to comparing a small group of people who smoke and have cancer with a slightly larger group who smoke and do not have cancer, and concluding that smoking does not cause cancer.

The DPH study also was far too small and shallow to reach the conclusions it did, he said.

 

State study defended

Suzanne Condon, DPH assistant commissioner, said Albanese confused the type of study her department conducted.

Condon said the comparison measurements Albanese is looking for were done by Broadcast Signal Lab in 2005 for an Air Force-sponsored study looking at whether PAVE PAWS was contributing to health problems on the Upper Cape.

The 2005 study, which did not look at Ewing’s sarcoma cases, and was reviewed by the National Academies of Science, concluded the radar station did not pose a threat to public health on Cape Cod.

The more recent DPH study was an “exposure study,” Condon said.

“We did a very focused study looking at PAVE PAWS emission levels in close proximity to homes of children diagnosed with (Ewing’s sarcoma). When you’re looking at an exposure, you try to match as closely as you can on all the variables,” she said.

The study was intended to help state health officials determine whether to launch a more intensive phase of investigation, Condon said.

In addition to the radar power measurements, DPH asked two pediatric oncologists to examine the results, and they agreed that more investigation of PAVE PAWS was not necessary, she said.

The way DPH approached the study makes sense to Dr. Thomas Burke, an epidemiologist at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Md.

What DPH did with the study “has to be interpreted in light of the monitoring that was done before. That said, there does not appear to be high levels of exposure throughout the Cape,” he said.

It made sense to look at data collected at the homes of the children diagnosed with Ewing’s sarcoma, and other areas of similar elevation and distance to see whether there was something unique about those exposures, in comparison to what was found across Cape Cod in 2005, said Burke, who is former deputy director of New Jersey’s health department.

“They had specific questions about peak exposure, and they did a good job of following up on that,” he said.

 

Scientific certainty elusive

Ann Aschengrau, professor of epidemiology at Boston University, agreed with Albanese that the DPH study was not rigorous enough to rule out PAVE PAWS as a factor in the Ewing’s cluster on Cape Cod.

“Matching on elevation and distance was essentially matching on exposure level, and so was a fatal flaw,” she wrote in an e-mail. “We often do match in epidemiological studies, but it’s usually done for variables like sex, race, etc.,” not possible disease exposures, she said.

For the study to be done properly, Albanese said peak power measurements of at least 1,000 random comparison sites would need to be done — preferably in off-Cape locations. The measurements would need to be repeated over time to see whether there was any seasonal variations in the measurements, he said.

Burke expressed confidence that the Massachusetts health department can get to the bottom of the Ewing’s sarcoma mystery. The department is viewed nationally as “having a pretty solid, good approach to investigating these kinds of things.”

Victor Vyssotsky of Orleans, a retired Bell Laboratory development director, said launching a full investigation into the cause of the Ewing’s sarcoma cluster would “use up resources and time” the state health department does not have.

Vyssotsky helped design an Alaskan radar station similar to PAVE PAWS and served on the first National Research Council panel that reviewed and cleared PAVE PAWS for public use in the early 1980s. He claimed the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention or the Mayo Clinic in Baltimore, Md., are the two best places to research the cause of the elevated Ewing’s sarcoma cases on Cape Cod.

While Vyssotsky said he is not an epidemiological expert, he has worked extensively in the field of military radar. He called Albanese, whom he knows personally, “a very dedicated, very sincere physician whose concerns about the effects of high-powered radiation in general are well-warranted.” He also asserted that “some of the inferences (Albanese) draws are a bit far-fetched.”

Albanese praised DPH investigators, but he said adequately researching whether PAVE PAWS is affecting residents’ health was beyond the realm of their expertise.

“I think they try to do a good job, but they have no experience with radiation and disease,” he said.

The Air Force doctor claimed the DPH study — as well as many of the past studies that have been conducted by the Air Force — did little to ease his concerns about PAVE PAWS. There has never been a human, laboratory animal or plant experiment to assess the biological impact of phased array radiation, he said.

To continue to expose the public to a type of radiation that has never been tested in the laboratory is like giving citizens a drug that was never tested for its safety, he said.

“I have no data to say that absolutely it is PAVE PAWS (that caused the Cape Ewing’s sarcoma cases)” he said. “But I am certain it cannot be ruled out.”

Robin Lord can be reached at rlord@capecodonline.com.

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Energy Watch: Public health authorities consider link between coal combustion waste, rare cancer cluster

clustera on Nov 4th 2008

Thursday, October 30, 2008

Energy Watch: Public health authorities consider link between coal combustion waste, rare cancer cluster

As someone who’s been reporting on the public health problems associated with poorly regulated coal combustion waste dumping for some time now, I’m heartened to see that this critical but often-overlooked issue has been getting more attention recently from major media.

The Post and Courier in Charleston, S.C. has been the latest to weigh in with a series that kicked off Sunday with a story titled “Coal’s Time Bomb.” The paper reports that South Carolina’s power plants dump about 2.3 billion pounds of toxic coal ash into landfills and holding ponds each year — many of them dangerously close to residential neighborhoods. Its investigation found that water under some of these landfills has concentrations of cancer-causing arsenic that exceed the federal limit many times over, yet operators have not received a single fine because of weak government oversight and regulatory loopholes. The Roanoke Times has also been reporting on American Electric Power’s dumping of coal combustion waste along the New River in Southwest Virginia, which is being fought by a grassroots group called Concerned Citizens of Giles County.

But something that’s not received much media attention yet is a possible link between coal combustion waste dumping and a cluster of rare blood cancers in Pennsylvania.

In August, the federal Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, a division of the Atlanta-based Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, confirmed its earlier findings that there’s an unusually high rate of the blood cancer polycythemia vera in three counties in eastern Pennsylvania’s anthracite coal mining region. Schuylkill, Luzerne and Carbon counties have a significantly elevated incidence of the disease — about four times the state’s rate, according to data from the state cancer registry. ATSDR also found three PV “hotspots” in the tri-county area where the incidence rate is even higher.

This area of Pennsylvania has the nation’s highest concentration of waste coal-burning power plants — facilities that burn the highly impure discards of the mining industry. At the same time, the state has promoted the filling of abandoned mines with the plants’ ash, essentially creating enormous, unlined landfills of toxic waste. A report released last year by the environmental advocacy groups Earthjustice and Clean Air Task Force found widespread contamination of groundwater from from coal combustion waste dumps across Pennsylvania, including in the area with the unusually high PV rate.

The red dots on the map at top show the location of officially confirmed cases of polycythemia vera in three eastern Pennsylvania counties studied. The map below shows the location of coal combustion waste dumps across the state. Note the striking correspondence between coal combustion waste dumps and confirmed PV cases.

Since the Pennsylvania cancer cluster was confirmed, public officials including U.S. Sen. Arlen Specter (R-Pa.) have been pressing for further study. Among the factors being considered for further research are groundwater contaminants in the local cluster area. One federal researcher involved in the cancer cluster study has told me that he and his colleagues are particularly interested in the possible connection between PV and toxic coal combustion byproducts known as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons — chemicals that have been linked to the specific genetic mutation associated with the cancer.

Stay tuned to Facing South for developments in this important story, which has implications for the millions of Americans who live near coal-burning power plants and their associated combustion waste dumps.

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Lyndhurst addresses cancer fear with new study

clustera on Nov 1st 2008

Lyndhurst addresses cancer fear with new study
Breaking News

By Alexis Tarrazi
Senior Reporter

LYNDHURST (Oct. 1, 2008, 11:30 a.m.) — As the personal crusade of Lorraine Colabella — a former Lyndhurst resident diagnosed with multiple myeloma — gains national attention, more concerns and questions continue to arise over the state’s recent cancer study in the area. In an effort to address the anxiety, the Lyndhurst Health Department recently asked a state agency to conduct another in-depth study of the area.

The results from this study find that multiple myeloma and all cancers are “not statistically significantly elevated” in Lyndhurst, according to a press release.

However, despite the results, Floyd Sands, director of field operations for the National Disease Cluster Alliance (a nonprofit that has recently joined Colabella’s crusade), has his doubts.

“No state cancer registry has ever identified a cancer cluster as that cluster was ongoing … never,” Sands wrote in an e-mail. “Cancer clusters are most often identified and exposed by the people experiencing them.”

The study originated after Health Administrator Joyce Jacobson, under the direction of Mayor Richard DiLascio, contacted the state Department of Health and Senior Services requesting an in-depth analysis — specifically, a standardized incidence ratio (SIR) — to be performed by the state Cancer Epidemiology Services.

“Multiple myeloma is not disproportionately affecting younger people in Lyndhurst, as has been questioned,” according to Dr. Christina Tan, acting state epidemiologist. “Only 19 percent of Lyndhurst residents diagnosed with multiple myeloma (1990-2005) were under the age of 65, compared to the American Cancer Society statistic stating that 34 percent of multiple myeloma cases are diagnosed under the age of 65.”

Using information from the New Jersey State Cancer Registry, the study looked at current and former residents who have been diagnosed.

However, this data would seemingly leave out Colabella’s case, as she was diagnosed in South Carolina.

Sands still has his doubts.

“ ‘Statistical significance’ is a device which is often used to muddy otherwise clear waters in the discussion of disease-impacted communities,” Sands wrote. “The definition of SIR is not rooted in science or mathematics; its use is arbitrary and capricious and amounts to nothing more than a ‘plug’ number.  SIR is often employed as a device by which to devolve the discussion from one of human suffering and death to one of statistics. The Lyndhurst discussion is not one about statistics; it is one about the human condition there.”
The future

Jacobson stated in the release that the health department is working with the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry and the NJDHSS Hazardous Site Health Evaluation Program to answer questions about environmental concerns related to the former site of Penick Corp., a manufacturer of pharmaceuticals, botanical extracts and pesticides, that used to be located on New York Avenue in the 1940s.

“They are reviewing data, will speak with the public and will provide a written report with recommendations,” Jacobson stated.

Colabella’s study

Colabella — diagnosed with multiple myeloma five years ago — began her crusade after posting a brief announcement in The Leader and receiving hundreds of responses.

Jacobson subsequently had the state CES conduct a study, and the results indicated the cancer rate in Lyndhurst is comparable to that of similar surrounding municipalities.

However, Colabella pushed forward and gained the attention of the NDCA and cancer cluster activist Erin Brockovich.

For any residents in the surrounding area who know of someone who has, or has had multiple myeloma, a rare cancer or any type of cancer, Colabella is asking them to contact lcolabella@gmail.com or write to PO Box 166, Marlton, NJ 08053. She asks respondents to include the year of diagnosis, age, gender and location.

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Advocates Call for Swift Action in Response to Community

clustera on Nov 1st 2008

 Advocates Call for Swift Action in Response to Community
Concerns of Disease Clusters

         October 30, 2008 – San Diego, California – Former U.S. Surgeon
General, Dr. Joycelyn Elders joined activists last night in kicking off
a campaign geared toward raising awareness and more effective response
to disease clusters in the country. Matt Wilhelm of the San Diego
Chargers and his wife, Vanessa as well as Steve Altman, President of
Qualcomm and his wife Lisa joined and aided the organization to raise
more than $25,000 towards this vital and emerging cause.

         A “disease cluster” is an unexpectedly large number of cases of
the same or similar diseases in a geographic area over a defined period
of time. The environment plays an important role in human development
and health. All populations are not created equal when it comes to
their ability to withstand environmental insults without serious health
consequences. It is well documented that exposure to toxic chemicals
can have a devastating impact on the fetus or on infants during
developmental “windows of vulnerability” when cells are dividing
rapidly.

         The campaign, “No Disease Clusters Anymore,” was spearheaded by
the nonprofit organization, the National Disease Clusters Alliance.

         Other speakers included Trevor Smith, a youth advocate for NDCA
and brain cancer survivor; and Dee Lewis, Executive Director of NDCA who
led the battle to uncover the environmental causes of the disease
cluster in the Calvine-Florin community in Sacramento.

         According to Lewis, “government resources, capacity, protocols,
and methodology have all been found inadequate for assisting
communities that are confronting a known or suspected
environmentally-related disease cluster.”

         Every year, residents request investigations into more than
1,000 suspected cancer clusters.  In 2002, a suspected cluster was
identified outside of San Diego. Valley Center residents have
documented 14 cases of childhood cancer between 1997 and 2002. Parents
believed there may be a link in the cases, with most of the children
affected living in the same general area.

According to Trevor Smith, NDCA Youth Ambassador (former San Diego
resident) of the McCall, Idaho suspected cancer cluster,” Cancer is
like a pebble dropped into still water – the effect ripples through
your life, your family, and your community.”

About NDCA

NDCA promotes vibrant, healthy communities through empowerment and
supportive partnerships. NDCA was formed out of the urgent need to
identify and respond to emerging disease clusters. NDCA is comprised of
agency, staff, nonprofit organizations, community activists,
scientists, and academia.

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