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Exposure to Agent Orange linked to prostate cancer in Vietnam veterans
By news release
Aug 5, 2008 - 8:06:19 AM
Contact: Karen Finney
karen.finney@ucdmc.ucdavis.edu
916-734-9064
University of California - Davis - Health System
Exposure to Agent Orange linked to prostate cancer in Vietnam veterans
(SACRAMENTO, Calif.) — UC Davis
Cancer Center physicians today released results of research showing
that Vietnam War veterans exposed to Agent Orange have greatly
increased risks of prostate cancer and even greater risks of getting
the most aggressive form of the disease as compared to those who were
not exposed.
The findings, which appear online now and will be published in the September 15 issue of the journal
Cancer,
are the first to link the herbicide with this form of cancer. The
research is also the first to utilize a large population of men in
their 60s and the prostate-specific antigen (PSA) test to screen for
the disease.
"While others have linked Agent Orange to
cancers such as soft-tissue sarcomas, Hodgkin's disease and
non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, there is limited evidence so far associating it
with prostate cancer," said Karim Chamie, lead author of the study and
resident physician with the UC Davis Department of Urology and the VA
Northern California Health Care System. "Here we report on the largest
study to date of Vietnam War veterans exposed to Agent Orange and the
incidence of prostate cancer."
Chamie also said that, unlike
previous studies that were either too small or conducted on men who
were too young, patients in the current study were entering their prime
years for developing prostate cancer. There was also the added
advantage that it was conducted entirely during the era of PSA
screening, providing a powerful tool for early diagnosis and tracking
of prostate cancer.
More than 13,000 Vietnam veterans enrolled
in the VA Northern California Health Care System were stratified into
two groups — exposed or not exposed to Agent Orange between 1962 and
1971. Based on medical evaluations conducted between 1998 and 2006, the
study revealed that twice as many men exposed to Agent Orange were
identified with prostate cancer. In addition, Agent Orange-exposed men
were diagnosed two-and-a-half years younger and were nearly four times
more likely to present with metastatic disease. Other prostate cancer
risk factors — race, body-mass index and smoking — were not
statistically different between the two groups.
"Our country's
veterans deserve the best possible health care, and this study clearly
confirms that Agent Orange exposure during service in Vietnam is
associated with a higher risk of prostate cancer later in life," said
Ralph deVere White, UC Davis Cancer Center director and a study
co-author. "Just as those with a family history of prostate cancer or
who are of African-American heritage are screened more frequently, so
too should men with Agent Orange exposure be given priority
consideration for all the screening and diagnostic tools we have at our
disposal in the hopes of early detection and treatment of this disease."
Now
a banned chemical, Agent Orange is a combination of two synthetic
compounds known to be contaminated with the dioxin
tetrachlorodibenzo-para-dioxin (TCDD) during the manufacturing process.
Named for the color of the barrel in which it was stored, Agent Orange
was one of many broad-leaf defoliants used in Vietnam to destroy dense
forests in order to better visualize enemy activity.
It is
estimated that more than 20 million gallons of the chemicals, also
known as "rainbow herbicides," were sprayed between 1962 and 1971,
contaminating both ground cover and ground troops. Most of the rainbow
herbicide used during this time was Agent Orange. In 1997, the
International Agency for Research on Cancer reclassified TCDD as a
group 1 carcinogen, a classification that includes arsenic, asbestos
and gamma radiation.
###
The
study was funded by the UC Davis Cancer Center. In addition to Chamie
and deVere White, study authors were Bryan Volpp, associate chief of
staff, clinical informatics, VA Northern California Health Care System;
Dennis Lee and Joon-ha Ok, UC Davis resident physicians with the
Department of Urology; and Lars Ellison who, at the time the study was
conducted, was an assistant professor with UC Davis and chief of
urology with the VA Northern California Health Care System. Ellison is
now affiliated with the Penobscot Bay Medical Center in Maine and a
major in the U.S. Army Reserve currently serving active duty in Iraq. A
copy of the study can be requested by e-mailing Amy Molnar at
amolnar@wiley.com.
Prostate cancer is the second most common
malignancy and the second leading cause of cancer death in American
men. It is estimated that there will be about 186,320 new cases of
prostate cancer in the United States in 2008 and about 28,660 men will
die of the disease this year.
Designated by the National
Cancer Institute, UC Davis Cancer Center is leading the way in
identifying the molecular pathogenesis of carcinoma of the prostate,
enhancing therapeutic response and identifying chemopreventions. For
more information, visit www.ucdmc.ucdavis.edu/cancer.