NHL Clinical Trial
Official title:
Influence of Corn Farming on the Immune System
This study will look for links between corn farming practices and short-term changes in
immune function in farmers throughout the growing season. It will examine biologic effects
associated with specific pesticide exposures and general planting activities, such as
tillage. Farmers have an increased risk of non-Hodgkin s lymphoma and certain other blood
cancers such as multiple myeloma and leukemia, but the reasons for this increase have not
been identified. Findings of this study may contribute to learning the causes of cancers such
as non-Hodgkin s lymphoma.
Farmers enrolled in the Agricultural Health Study (a study of pesticide applicators and their
spouses in Iowa and North Carolina) and a group of control subjects selected from
agricultural extension workers in Iowa may participate in this study.
The study involves six home visits to farmers and four visits to farmers to individuals in
the control group. All participants will complete the following tests and procedures:
- Questionnaires and diaries During the first visit, all participants will have a medical
history review, including questions about smoking and other health habits. Farmers will
be asked about their farming practices, and controls will be asked about their
occupations. Farmers will fill out daily diaries during short time periods of interest
around certain pesticide applications to describe farming activities that day. At other
times during the growing season before harvest, farmers will fill out weekly diaries
describing farming activities; controls, meanwhile, will fill out weekly diaries
describing their health and work activities. At home visits during the farmers growing
season, all participants will fill out questionnaires about their health. Finally,
farmers and controls will complete a more extensive questionnaire in the off-season,
during the last home visit, to learn about their activities and exposures in the final
part of the year (post-harvest for farmers).
- Urine samples: At the time of each home visit, controls will provide a urine sample that
the interviewer will take that day. Farmers, too, will provide urine samples at the time
of home visits, but they will also collect urine samples for a period of 4 days each
during short time periods of interest after certain pesticide applications. The
interviewer will collect these samples immediately at the end of these periods.
- Blood samples: At the time of each home visit, the interviewer will draw 50 ml (3.5
tablespoons) of blood.
- Telephone calls: Farmers will be called frequently from once every 2 weeks to every
other day to schedule visits at the times of interest. Control subjects will also be
called frequently to schedule their visits closely to those of the farmers.
When compared to the general population, farmers have an increased risk of non-Hodgkin's
lymphoma (NHL) and certain other hematopoeitic cancers (i.e., multiple myeloma, leukemia).
Factors that contribute to this excess risk have not been discerned. While several
epidemiologic studies have observed an increased risk of NHL among farmers who are exposed to
certain pesticides (i.e., phenoxyacetic acids, organophosphates, organochlorines, and
triazines), these studies have not been conclusive. In addition, a clear mechanistic
association between farming or pesticide exposure and subsequent development of cancer has
not been identified. Given that immunocompromised individuals are at increased risk for NHL,
it has been hypothesized that altered immune function may be an indicator of increased
potential for the development of immunologically based diseases such as NHL. Therefore,
research into early immunologic effects of farming exposures holds some promise in discerning
disease mechanisms and in identifying specific etiologic agents for lymphatic cancers such as
NHL. Few such studies have been conducted.
This protocol outlines a study of immune effects among corn farmers within Agricultural
Health Study (AHS) cohort. The main objective is to evaluate the changes in immune parameters
in farmers throughout the growing season, as well as effects of specific pesticide exposures
including atrazine and organophosphate (OP) insecticides. Farmers and control subjects were
contacted just prior to planting (February-March) to be enrolled in the study. Biological
sampling before and after planting and application of preemergent pesticides (likely to
include atrazine and possibly Ops or carbamates) allowed examination of short-term biologic
effects associated with specific pesticide exposures and general planting activities (e.g.,
tillage). The first post-emergent application of organophosphate insecticide will also be
monitored, in order to evaluate short-term biologic effects associated with this OP
exposture. Post-harvest and off-season samples also were collected to allow evaluation of
overall immune effects of farming activities. Pesticide exposures (e.g., atrazine, OPs, and
potentially 2,4-D or carbamates) are being assessed primarily by measurement of the parent
compound or its metabolites in urine, and additional information on farming activities and
work practices will be obtained by questionnaire. Farmers serve as their own self-controls,
and a selected control group will provide a means for external comparison.
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