United States Environmental Protection Agency	Office of Research and Development

National Exposure Research Laboratory
Research Abstract

Government Performance Results Act (GPRA) Goal 4
Annual Performance Measure 23

Significant Research Findings:

Agricultural Health Study/Pesticide Exposure Study

Scientific	Despite low mortality and cancer incidence rates overall, farmers may experience

Problem and	excess risk of specific cancers, as observed in some retrospective epidemiological

Policy Issues	studies of agricultural workers. Farmers, their families, and other pesticide

applicators may have contact with pesticides and a variety of other potentially
hazardous substances (e.g., solvents, fuels, oils, exhaust, dust, agriculturally-
specific microbes). Previous epidemiologic studies of farmers, other agricultural
workers, and agricultural pesticide applicators have been limited by inadequate or
retrospective exposure information.

Limitations of these previous studies are being addressed through the Agricultural
Health Study (AHS), a prospective epidemiological study to quantify the cancer
and non-cancer risks in the agricultural community and to study the relationships
between agricultural pesticide exposures and disease. The AHS is a collaborative
effort between the National Cancer Institute (NCI), the National Institute of
Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS), and the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency (U.S. EPA). The study uses questionnaires to provide information
regarding pesticide use, work practices, and other agricultural exposures, as well
as information on other activities that may affect either exposure or risk for a large
(more than 89,000) cohort of licensed agricultural pesticide applicators and their
spouses in Iowa and North Carolina.

Information derived from the study questionnaires is used to develop exposure-
classification procedures for subsequent investigation of associations between
pesticide exposure and specific diseases. Exposure measurement data are needed
to assess these questionnaire-based exposure-classification procedures.

Research	The U.S. EPA is conducting the Pesticide Exposure Study (PES) to assess the

Approach	exposure classification procedures developed from the AHS questionnaire data

and to better understand factors leading to pesticide exposures for agricultural
pesticide applicators and their families. The PES is an exposure measurement
field study for a small subset of agricultural pesticide applicators and participating
family members in the AHS cohort.

On-farm field measurements during pesticide applications on a single day were
conducted in North Carolina and Iowa over a three-year period during the 2000 to
2002 growing seasons. A total of 84 licensed agricultural pesticide applicators in
the AHS cohort were enrolled into the study and completed 108 monitoring days.


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Potential dermal exposures were measured using patch and hand wipe samples.
Personal air samples were collected to measure inhalation exposure. Urinary
biomarker concentrations were measured in samples collected before and at
several times after monitored pesticide applications. Pesticide handling activities
were used and questionnaires were administered at two times following the
observed chemical use. Urinary biomarker concentrations were also measured for
49 participating spouses and 12 children to determine whether applicator family
members may be exposed to applied pesticides.

Results and	The AHS Pesticide Exposure Study provides real-world exposure data for

Impact	improving exposure and risk assessments for agricultural pesticide applicators and

their families. This research will contribute towards improving health risk
assessments in the AHS epidemiological study. Information from the study will
be used to assess and refine exposure classification procedures and to aid
development of the exposure component of the AHS cohort-wide questionnaire to
be administered beginning in 2005. The results may also provide information on
how pesticides can be handled more safely to reduce the exposure risks to farm-
workers and their families. Study findings may be used by pesticide safety
educators to improve training programs for agricultural pesticide applicators and
other pesticide handlers.

The AHS is a collaborative study being conducted by the National Cancer
Institute, the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, and the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency. The Office of Research and Development's
National Exposure Research Laboratory (NERL) and the Office of Pesticide
Programs are the primary EPA collaborators for the study.

The AHS Pesticide Exposure Study field monitoring and sample analysis was
supported by task orders under contracts with Battelle Memorial Institute and RTI
International. Battelle subcontractors include the University of Iowa and
Southwest Research Institute. Support for participant selection and screening was
made through an interagency agreement with the National Cancer Institute and
their field stations in Iowa (University of Iowa) and North Carolina (Battelle
Centers for Public Health Research and Evaluation) as well as their data
coordinating center (Westat).

Preliminary results from the AHS Pesticide Exposure Study have been presented
at recent scientific conferences and symposia. Examples of these presentations
include the following:

Thomas, K., Sheldon, L., Gordon, S., Jones, M., Reynolds, S., Raymer, J., Akland, G., Dosemeci,
M. and Alavanja, A. " Interim Results from the Agricultural Health Study/pesticide Exposure
Study." International Society for Exposure Analysisl2th Annual Conference, Vancouver, BC,
Canada, August 11 - 15, 2002.

Thomas, K.W., Sheldon, L.S., Sandler, D.P., Dosemeci,M., and Alavanja, M.C.R. "Agricultural
Health Study/Pesticide Exposure Study: Study Design and Preliminary Biomarker Results."
International Symposium on Agricultural Exposures and Cancer, Oxford, U.K., November 17 -
22, 2002.

Research
Collaboration and
Research
Products

The U.S. EPA/NERL is supporting exposure and health-outcome analyses and


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publications for the larger AHS epidemiological study. The following is an
example of a recent publication led by NCI researchers:

Alavanja, M., Samanic, C., Dosemeci, M., Lubin, J., Tarone, R., Lynch, C., Knott, C., Thomas, K.,
Hoppin, J., Barker, J., Coble, J., Sandler, D., and Blair, A. "Use of Agricultural Pesticides and
Prostate Cancer Risk in the Agricultural Health Study Cohort." J. of American Epidemiology
157:800-814,2003.

Future Research Data analysis and reporting will continue on the AHS Pesticide Exposure Study
through 2004. No additional exposure measurement studies are planned by the
U.S. EPA/NERL in support of the AHS. NERL scientists will continue to
collaborate with researchers from other agencies in support of exposure
assessment for the AHS cohort.

Questions and inquiries can be directed to the principal investigator:

Mr. Kent Thomas

U.S. EPA, Office of Research and Development
National Exposure Research Laboratory
MD E205-04

Research Triangle Park, NC, 27711
Phone: 919-541-7939
E-mail: thomas.kent@epa.gov

Contacts for

Additional

Information

Federal funding for this research was administered under EPA Contracts 68-D99-
011 and 68-D99-012, and through Interagency Agreement DW-75-93912801-0.


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