5&5: News and science highlights from November 2011

December 13, 2011 at 10:51 pm | Posted in 5&5 News & Science | Leave a comment

News

For our full news archive, visit: http://delicious.com/contaminanthealthscience/News

Exposure Science and the Exposome: An Opportunity for Coherence in the Environmental Health Sciences: Exposure scientists Lioy and Rappaport describe how studying the “exposome” could be a major boon to research in environmental health, allowing quicker identification of potentially harmful agents, and deeper and more directed study of what those agents are.

Anti-PVC push in health care grows: The American Public Health Association this week passed a resolution urging facilities such as hospitals, schools and nursing homes reduce the amount of PVC they use, especially with phthalates.

EU Food Safety Authority finds compliance with pesticide rules is increasing: A report which needs to be understood in context. Although residues of individual pesticides are decreasing, the total number of pesticide residues is increasing (see this chart by PAN Europe), potentially resulting in a net increase in pesticide residues on food. The total toxicity of this mix is not a factor in assessing residue safety.

Survey asks women if they know what’s in their makeup and hygiene products: A survey of 1,000 Portland women found they generally trust the cosmetic products they use – even though didn’t know what was in them and believe there may be health risks associated with their use.

Regulatory development of the month: MEPs call for more action from EFSA on BPA. Members of the European Parliament grilled Catherine Geslain-Lanéelle, executive director of the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA), about how the agency plans to tackle the potential dangers associated with bisphenol A (BPA). For our full archive of regulatory developments, visit: http://delicious.com/contaminanthealthscience/Regulation

Science

For our full science archive, visit: http://delicious.com/contaminanthealthscience/Science

Prenatal Concentrations of PCBs, DDE, DDT and Overweight in Children. Prospective epidemiological study suggesting that prenatal organochlorine exposures may be associated with overweight in children and makes boys in particular more susceptible to weight gain from a high-fat diet.

In Favor of Controlling Proven, but Not Probable, Causes of Cancer. Nuanced and thoughtful exchange about the value of expanding cancer prevention efforts beyond agents which definitely cause cancer to also include measures to limit exposure to probable carcinogens. Position in favour of status quo; position in favour of expansion.

Perfluorinated compounds are related to breast cancer risk in Greenlandic Inuit: An extraordinary increase in breast cancer has been observed in the Inuit population of Greenland and Canada. Here, researchers observe for the first time a significant association between serum PFC levels and the risk of BC in Greenlandic Inuit.

The Emerging Role of EDCS in Insulin Resistance: Implicating Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease: Evaluation of whether or not EDCs may play a role in the pathogenesis of NAFLD, a condition related to insulin resistance and apparently affecting 30-45% of the western population.

Next-generation brominated flame retardants found in Nordic environment: Researchers have found emerging flame retardants, increasingly used since the phase-out of PBDEs, in samples from all environmental media collected in the Nordic region.

Memories of John Newby from his friend and academic mentor, Vyvyan Howard

November 10, 2011 at 6:44 pm | Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

It is with sadness that we announce the sudden passing of John Newby, CPES’ enormously capable Medical Information Scientist. CPES funded John’s Masters degree and here Vyvyan Howard recalls their time together at university:

I met John after he had received his degree. It was clear that he was heading for a First Class Honours degree before he was struck down in his prime by systemic sclerosis. John was one of the brightest students that the Department of Anatomy and Human Biology had had. He wanted dearly to continue his academic studies in biological science at a postgraduate level, but it was clear that because of the disabilities resulting from his condition that laboratory research would not be possible. We managed to find money from various charitable sources to initially study for a Masters degree which was subsequently transferred to a full Doctor of Philosophy.

John had to retrain completely and study the field of epidemiology and environmental chemistry. This he did with gusto and it was clear to me that his illness had, mercifully, not affected his exceptional intellect in the slightest. The result was that he developed a new statistical index for determining whether the average age of onset of a cancer within a population was becoming progressively younger or older.

In his thesis he demonstrated that for cancers of the breast, testis and prostate the age of onset was receding, that is people were getting the disease at a younger age, on average. Many epidemiologists have taken an interest in this since we published the paper. It will be part of John’s legacy to see the modelling, that he started, refined into a powerful tool that could be put to use to help modify public health policy in the future.

John Newby was an exceptional man and it has been a privilege to know him and to work with him. Despite having been dealt an awful blow to his health and wellbeing when in the prime of his life, he always remained positive, looking for the next challenge.

We went together to a conference on the Aegean island of Kos a good number of years ago. I was his ‘chariot’ driver as we negotiated busy airports. His wry sense of humour, on that and many other occasions, will remain with me and I will miss him badly.

Vyvyan Howard. Coleraine, 24th October  2011

5&5: News and Science Highlights from October 2011

November 8, 2011 at 3:03 pm | Posted in 5&5 News & Science | Leave a comment

NEWS

Breast cancer: Any link to pollutants remains hazy: Detailed article in the LA Times about suspicions that incidence of breast cancer is influenced by environmental pollutants. There is strong evidence from animal studies, but finding proof in humans is challenging: latency periods, unknown exposures and combined multiple risk factors all muddy the waters.

Advising parents in the face of scientific uncertainty: an environmental health dilemma: Excellent, in-depth article about how to communicate environmental health issues to parents. On the one hand, these threats may be the least of some people’s worries (and their doctors’ as well). On the other, these issues can be a source of great concern, even though the potential health effects involved for individuals are far from certain.

EFSA announces new review of safety of BPA: The European Food Safety Authority has announced a fresh review of its opinion on the safety of BPA, following the publication of two reports preceding a French National Assembly vote banning “the fabrication, import, export and placing on the market of all food contact materials containing BPA from 1 January 2014”.

Philadelphia becomes hotbed of autism research: Interesting article about research being undertaken to obtain more information about how the environment may trigger autism, important in the context of recent findings that the disease is not as dependent on genetics as previously thought.

Two New Reasons to Worry about Air Pollution: Obesity and Diabetes: Forbes looks at how arguments against tighter controls on air pollution begin to unravel in the face of a spate of new studies that have found a rather convincing correlation between the presence of small particulate matter and both obesity and diabetes.

SCIENCE

Perinatal exposure to BPA increases adult mammary gland progesterone response and cell number: Mice exposed around birth to environmentally relevant doses of bisphenol A (BPA) experience changes to long-term hormone response and breast development which may increase the propensity to develop cancer. Study summarised in ScienceDaily.

Impact of Early-Life Bisphenol A Exposure on Behavior and Executive Function in Children: In this study, published in the medical journal Pediatrics, gestational BPA exposure was found to affect behavioural and emotional regulation domains at 3 years of age, especially among girls. The findings were covered by TIME, while a mouse study also published in October found further evidence that BPA may cause behaviour change.

In utero exposure to bisphenol-A and anogenital distance of male offspring: Ano-genital distance is becoming an increasingly well-recognised biomarker of harm to the male reproductive system. This epidemiological study found that a highly significant relationship between maternal exposure to BPA and reduced AGD in their sons.

Chronic consumption of farmed salmon containing persistent organic pollutants causes insulin resistance and obesity in mice: Study finding that mice fed on a diet high in salmon contaminated with POPs were more likely to develop type 2 diabetes and become obese, providing further evidence of a role for POPs in these conditions. Farmed fish can be relatively heavily contaminated with POPs, mainly because of contaminated feed. EHN published a synopsis of these findings.

Prenatal Concentrations of PCBs, DDE, DDT and Overweight in Children: A Prospective Birth Cohort Study: This epidemiological study finds that prenatal organochlorine exposure may be associated with overweight in children, in particular making them more susceptible to weight gain from a high-fat diet.

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