Copyright 2005 Obesity, Fitness & Wellness Week via NewsRx.com & NewsRx.net Obesity, Fitness & Wellness Week
May 14, 2005
SECTION: EXPANDED REPORTING; Pg. 315
LENGTH: 536 words
HEADLINE: CARCINOGENS;
Cancer
risk increased for
BODY:
Even
The study, conducted by a group of U.S. Air Force and other researchers, analyzed cancer rates among nearly 1500 Air Force veterans who served in Southeast Asia during the Vietnam War, but did not actually spray Agent Orange or other herbicides. The men served as a comparison group in a previous study of cancer risk in veterans of Operation Ranch Hand, the unit responsible for spraying Agent Orange.
Even though they didn't work with Agent Orange, veterans in the comparison group had significant blood levels of TCDD, the highly toxic dioxin contaminant of Agent Orange. The current study was designed to assess whether low-level exposure to TCDD affected the later risk of developing cancer.
Higher
blood levels of TCDD were associated with higher rates of cancer in the years
after serving in
The findings were published in the Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine.
The
study also looked at how length of service in
There
was also a significant interaction between duration of service and dioxin
contamination - veterans who served longer in
TCDD
and other dioxins have been linked to cancer and a wide range of other health
problems. A recent study found increased rates of cancer - specifically
prostate cancer and melanoma - in Air Force veterans who sprayed Agent Orange
during the Vietnam War. That study also suggested possible increases in cancer
risk in the comparison group of Air Force veterans who served in
The new results support the finding of increased cancer rates for veterans with higher TCDD levels, even though they weren't directly exposed to Agent Orange. TCDD may promote the development of cancer even at very low levels of exposure. Another possible explanation is that blood TCDD levels reflect some other, unknown risk factor.
The
interaction between cancer risk, TCDD levels and time served in
This article was prepared by Obesity, Fitness & Wellness Week editors from staff and other reports. Copyright 2005, Obesity, Fitness & Wellness Week via NewsRx.com.