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Julia Heck, associate research professor of epidemiology in the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health. Source: UCLA |
The study, published in the August International Journal of Hygiene and Environmental Health, found that children prenatally exposed to the chemicals acephate and bromacil had an increased risk of developing unilateral retinoblastoma, or cancer in one eye, and that exposure to pymetrozine and kresoxim-methyl increased the risk of all types of retinoblastoma.
“What’s important is looking at specific bad actors and identifying them,” said Julia Heck, an adjunct associate professor in the department of epidemiology at the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health, who studies environmental causes of childhood cancers.
Identifying specific pesticides correlated with cancer is the first step toward banning or replacing them with less harmful options.
The researchers studied land use data and pesticide use reports — which provide information on where, when and in what quantity the chemicals are applied — to determine locations of possible pesticide exposure. They considered 132 pesticides that are associated with cancer.
They compared children with retinoblastoma to random children with California birth certificates and found that those with cancer were more likely to have been born in neighborhoods near applications of specific pesticides.