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http://www.motherjones.com/mother_jones/MJ94/castleman.html

 

Why?

Despite mounting evidence of environmental causes for the breast

cancer explosion, our scientific and political establishments have

avoided investigating them. . .

The answer is worth knowing because, in this case, knowledge could

be power--the power to redirect the nation's research priorities

toward a theory that might save thousands of women.

 

by Michael Castleman

 

Scientists can't find what they don't look for--or what they ignore.

Maybe that's why it's taken so long for the cancer research

community to

acknowledge that environmental pollutants may play a key role in the

current breast cancer epidemic.

 

As long as 30 years ago, researchers showed that organochlorines, a

family of compounds including the pesticide DDT and the industrial

chemicals known as polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), could induce

mammary tumors in laboratory animals, a red flag suggesting they

might

do the same in women. But for more than a decade, the cancer

establishment--the National Cancer Institute, the American Cancer

Society, and researchers at the nation's leading cancer research

centers--largely ignored these findings.

 

Almost two decades ago, researchers noted that human breast tumors

contain higher levels of these toxic chemicals than surrounding

cancer-free breast tissue. Like the earlier studies, this research

didn't prove that organochlorines cause human breast cancer, but it

certainly raised the possibility and cried out for follow-up

studies.

Still, little attention was paid to the subject for another 15

years.

 

Finally in 1992, Frank Falck, M.D., Ph.D., then an assistant

clinical

professor in the department of surgery at the University of

Connecticut School of Medicine, published an analysis of tissue

samples from 40 women who had biopsies of suspicious breast lumps.

Compared with lumps judged benign, those that were cancerous showed

much higher levels of PCBs, DDT, and DDE (a DDT breakdown product).

 

Falck is an ophthalmologist-toxicologist, a cancer research

outsider. He

received no support from the National Cancer Institute or the

American Cancer Society. But he had good timing. In recent years,

breast cancer has become a major political issue. The nation's

breast cancer

activists--including an increasing number of researchers--have

become fed up with the lack of progress against the disease, and

several have been pursuing the possibility that organochlorines may

be contributing

to the epidemic. Last October, President Clinton announced that the

National Institutes of Health's 1994 breast cancer research budget

would be $300 million, a 44 percent increase over 1993. And in

December,

Secretary of Health and Human Services Donna Shalala convened the

federal government's first breast cancer summit.

 

But the question remains: Why has it taken the cancer establishment

three long decades to get serious about the possibility that

pesticides and other environmental pollutants might cause breast

cancer? The answer is worth knowing because, in this case, knowledge

could be power--the

power to redirect the nation's research priorities toward a theory

that might save thousands of women's lives.

 

 

Breast cancer strikes 182,000 American women a year and kills more

than 46,000. For the last 50 years, the breast cancer rate has been

rising steadily and seemingly inexorably almost everywhere in the

industrialized world. From 1973 to 1988, the U.S. breast cancer rate

rose 26 percent. American women now have one chance in eight of

developing breast cancer at some point in their lives.

 

Age is by far the most significant factor in the development of

breast

cancer. (About three-quarters of breast tumors are diagnosed in

postmenopausal women.) But enormous controversy surrounds the causes

of the disease. Its major risk factors seem to fall into three

categories:

 

 

Heredity.

Researchers estimate that 5 percent of breast cancers are

hereditary.

Scientists have yet to isolate the gene (or genes) responsible, so

its role is still largely unknown.

Lifetime exposure to estrogen.

 

Estrogen, the female sex hormone, is a well-known promoter of breast

tumors. Estrogen-related risk factors include: early menarche (first

menstrual period), late menopause, and childlessness or late

childbearing.

 

A few studies suggest some increased risk for women who have used

estrogen-based birth control pills, and those taking

postmenopausal estrogen replacement therapy. In addition, alcohol

has an estrogenlike effect, and some studies have associated even

modest drinking with increased risk.

 

Dietary fat.

The breast cancer-fat link is very controversial, but migration

studies suggest a correlation. Japanese women who eat that nation's

traditional diet--with fewer than 20 percent of calories from fat--

rarely develop

breast cancer. But when Japanese women move to the United States and

adopt the typical American diet--about 35 percent fat--their breast

cancer rate quickly rises, and within one generation, their

daughters'

rate approaches the general U.S. rate. On the other hand, several

rigorous studies, including a recent eight-year Harvard survey of

89,000

nurses, have shown no correlation between dietary fat and breast

cancer

risk.

Despite all the attention paid to breast cancer risk factors,

they're

not very useful. The American Cancer Society estimates that the

recognized risk factors explain only about 25 percent of breast

cancers,

leaving the remaining 75 percent as unpredictable as random

shootings.

In addition, the recognized risk factors do little to explain breast

cancer's dramatic increase in recent decades. A growing number of

scientists believe exposure to organochlorines may hold part of the

answer.

 

Organochlorines are organic compounds containing chlorine bonded to

carbon. Virtually unknown in nature, they are primarily products or

byproducts of the chemical industry. Their largest single use is in

the

manufacture of polyvinyl chloride (PVC) plastics, but they are also

used

in bleaching, disinfection, dry cleaning, fire prevention,

refrigeration, and such pesticides as DDT and atrazine. One hundred

seventy-seven different organochlorines have been found in human

tissue

and fluids. (Atrazine is still widely used. PCBs and DDT were banned

years ago, but are still with us because they persist in the

environment. An EPA report on dioxin, another highly toxic

organochlorine, was scheduled for release in January but has been

repeatedly postponed. It reportedly discloses that Americans have

far

higher levels of dioxin in their systems than was previously

thought, and raises new questions about the chemical's relationship

to breast

cancer and other health problems.)

 

Most of the research linking organochlorines to breast cancer risk

has focused on pesticides and PCBs because of their persistence in

the

environment and because toxicological data are available for them.

Other organochlorines may be equally (or more) hazardous, but less

is known

about their effects on human beings.

Falck's 1992 study showing elevated levels of organochlorines in

cancerous breast tumors set off a quiet flurry of scientific

activity.

One of Falck's co-authors, Mary Wolff, Ph.D., an associate professor

in

the division of environmental and occupational medicine at the Mount

Sinai School of Medicine in New York, subsequently analyzed archived

blood specimens taken from more than 14,000 women beginning in 1985.

Samples from the 58 women later diagnosed with breast cancer were

compared with blood samples from 171 similar women who remained

cancer-free. Those with cancer showed significantly higher blood

levels

of DDE. Compared with women showing the least blood contamination,

women

with the most DDE had four times the breast cancer risk. Wolff's

study

is important not only because it was larger than previous ones, but

also

because it more accurately took into account the accepted risk

factors

for breast cancer.

 

Organochlorines may contribute to cancer risk in several ways. Some

directly mutate genetic material; others enhance the carcinogenicity

of

other chemicals; and some mimic or disrupt natural hormones,

including

estrogen. DDT, DDE, and PCBs are all " xenoestrogens, " which bind to

the

body's estrogen receptors. Xenoestrogens add important new

dimensions to

two of the accepted non-hereditary risk factors, estrogen exposure

and

dietary fat.

 

At least three researchers theorize that organochlorine pesticides

and

other xenoestrogens may significantly increase estrogen-related

risk.

Ana Soto, associate professor of anatomy and cellular biology at

Tufts

University, points out that the body eliminates natural estrogen

cyclically, causing its levels to rise and fall. Many xenoestrogens,

on

the other hand, are not eliminated. Instead, they accumulate in

fatty

tissues such as those in the breast, where they remain even after

menopause, when natural estrogen levels drop.

 

In addition, estrogen may be metabolized along two paths, " good " and

" bad, " which balance each other's effects. Xenoestrogens appear to

block

the good estrogen path, allowing bad metabolized estrogen to promote

tumor growth. This theory has been advanced by Devra Lee Davis,

Ph.D.,

M.P.H., a senior adviser to the Department of Health and Human

Services'

assistant secretary of health and the founding coordinator of the

Breast

Cancer Prevention Collaborative Research Group, and H. Leon Bradlow,

director of biochemical endocrinology at Strang Cornell Cancer

Research

Laboratory. Metabolism of the natural estrogen known as estradiol,

they

explain, produces both 2-hydroxyestrone (2-OHE1 or " good " estrogen)

and

16-alpha hydroxyestrone (16 alpha-OHE1, " bad " estrogen). The 16

alpha-OHE1 stimulates uncontrolled cell division, a trait associated

with cancer. Xenoestrogens appear to block the 2-OHE1 pathway and

increase levels of 16 alpha-OHE1.

 

Organochlorines also neatly explain the dietary fat controversy.

Recall

that migration studies suggest a link, but that most epidemiological

investigations have come up empty. " It's not the amount of fat in a

woman's diet, " Falck explains. " It's what's in the fat. A woman may

have

a low-fat diet, but if the fat she consumes is contaminated with

PCBs

and DDE, bingo. "

 

The effect of organochlorines in fat tissue is cumulative. " Food

animals

already have a toxic load accumulated in their own fat tissue, "

Falck

continues, " and when women eat it, they get a much larger dose than

they

would from eating a vegetable containing some pesticide residue. The

organochlorines become more concentrated as you move up the food

chain. "

 

 

An organochlorine link could also explain a recent drop in the

breast

cancer death rate in Israel. Between 1976 and 1986, breast cancer

deaths

(which had been continually rising for 25 years) dropped 8 percent.

 

Based on the commonly accepted risk factors, Israel's breast cancer

death rate should, if anything, have increased. There was a strong

trend

toward delayed childbearing, and alcohol and fat consumption

increased

significantly.

 

Yet the death rate declined, and Jerome Westin and Elihu Richter,

environmental medicine specialists at the Hebrew University-Hadassah

School of Medicine in Jerusalem, offer a possible explanation: In

1978,

Israel banned three organochlorine pesticides: DDT, alpha-benzene

hexachloride (BHC), and gamma-benzene hexachloride (lindane). Before

the

ban these pesticides had been used in cowsheds. As a result,

pesticide

levels in Israeli milk soared up to 100 times those in the United

States. Public outcry caused Israel to ban these pesticides, and

within

two years, DDT, BHC, and lindane levels in milk had dropped

precipitously.

 

Critics have challenged Westin and Richter, saying that the drop in

breast cancer deaths occurred " too soon " after the ban. Scientists

commonly believe it takes about 20 years for carcinogens to do their

dirty work, but the significant decline in Israel's breast cancer

death

rate was noticed only a few years after the organochlorine ban.

Westin

and Richter counter that organochlorines are " complete " carcinogens,

which both initiate and promote tumor growth. Scientists believe

that

the withdrawal of complete carcinogens affects cancer statistics in

just

a few years.

 

 

Statistics represent human tragedies without the tears. Individual

women

with breast cancer almost never know whether environmental toxins

played

a role, even if they're certain they were exposed to them. In 1973,

a

few hundred pounds of polybrominated biphenyls (PBBs), close

chemical

relatives of PCBs, were accidentally mixed into animal feed in

Michigan.

More than 30,000 cattle, 1.5 million chickens, and thousands of

sheep

and hogs either died or had to be slaughtered, and some 9 million

Michigan residents consumed PBB-tainted meat and dairy products. By

1976, 96 percent of Michigan's nursing mothers showed PBB in their

breast milk.

 

Among those exposed to PBBs were my wife, Anne, and myself. We lived

in

Michigan at the time. About 15 years later, at the unusually young

age

of 38, Anne was diagnosed with breast cancer. Anne is a family

physician

and an assistant clinical professor at the University of

California's

San Francisco Medical Center. She's well informed about breast

cancer

risk factors, and after her diagnosis, she calculated that her risk

was

quite low, especially given her age. Could her case have been caused

by

PBB exposure?

 

" Not based on what we know now, " says Harold Humphrey, Ph.D., a

public

health laboratory scientist for the Michigan Health Department's

division of environmental risk assessment. Humphrey, who is

directing

the state's ongoing study of 4,000 farm family members who were

heavily

exposed to PBBs, says, " The people in our study definitely have PBBs

in

their fat stores, but so far--and we're 20 years out now--we've seen

no

unexpected increases in their cancer rate. "

 

But other experts are less sure. Janette Sherman, M.D., a

toxicologist

in Alexandria, Va., and author of " Chemical Exposure and Disease, "

believes PBBs may have contributed significantly to Anne's

cancer. " Anne

has no family history, but she developed breast cancer at age 38.

When a

late-life cancer strikes unusually early in life, you have to

suspect an

environmental insult. "

 

Anne and I both wonder if PBBs played a role in her cancer. Right

now,

no one knows for sure, but we believe more money should be invested

in

finding out. Unfortunately, that's easier said than done.

 

 

Despite the studies pointing to organochlorines as contributors to

the

breast cancer epidemic, their role--if any--is highly controversial.

Scientists agree that occupational exposures to large amounts of

toxic

chemicals can cause cancer (and other illnesses). But here we're

dealing

with non-occupational exposures to amounts so minute that, until

fairly

recently, they could not even be measured.

 

" Low-level exposure to toxic chemicals has not been shown to pose a

major cancer risk, " says Clark Heath, M.D., chief epidemiologist at

the

American Cancer Society's headquarters in Atlanta. " The Israeli

study is

interesting, but not scientifically convincing. As for Falck's and

Wolff's studies, they raise questions, but don't answer them. "

 

The only way to answer these questions, however, is through

additional

research into toxic agents, and not enough is being done. In a

presentation to the National Cancer Institute on behalf of 68

scientific

experts, Samuel Epstein, M.D., a professor of occupational and

environmental medicine at the University of Illinois School of

Public

Health in Chicago, charged that the agencies that fund cancer

research

are " continually . . . discounting or ignoring the causal role of

avoidable exposures to industrial carcinogens. "

 

The National Cancer Institute and the American Cancer Society

bristle at

this accusation, saying they spend millions of dollars a year on

cancer

prevention studies. " The problem, " Epstein says, " is that most of

what

they call 'prevention' is actually basic science, research at the

cellular and molecular levels. They devote so little to what I'd

call

prevention--for example, studies of the organochlorine pesticides--

that

I must conclude they are indifferent to it. "

 

Why has the cancer establishment been so slow to consider the role

of

environmental factors in breast cancer? Several reasons:

 

 

The research mind-set.

The myth is that scientists are selfless truth-seekers whose hearts

and

minds are always open to new ideas. That's partly true, but

scientists

are also trained to be skeptics, and sometimes their skepticism

makes

granite look like marshmallow. Nobel Prize-winning physicist Max

Planck

once said: " A new scientific truth does not triumph by convincing

its

opponents and making them see the light, but rather because its

opponents eventually die, and a new generation grows up that has

been

familiar with the idea from their youth. "

Grant money.

Most scientists live and die by research funding, and funds are

always

scarce. Those who have devoted their careers to Topic A are rarely

thrilled to see Topic B come into vogue and snatch their funding.

Increased support for the organochlorine theory threatens those who

are

heavily invested in other areas--for example, the hot biotech search

for

the elusive breast cancer gene.

The medical mind-set.

" Physicians are trained to detect, diagnose, and treat illness, "

Falck

explains. " More funding should be directed toward prevention. " The

medical establishment has taken some strong preventive positions,

such

as urging smokers to quit. But the evolution of that position is

instructive: Cigarettes were persuasively linked to lung cancer in

the

early 1950s, but it took more than a decade for the surgeon general

to

issue the first major call to quit.

Environmental backlash.

Organochlorine pesticides and other toxic chemicals came into wide

use

during World War II. Given the presumed 20- to 30-year lag time for

many

cancers, early environmentalists predicted that starting in the

1970s,

the United States would experience a sharp increase in cancer--but

it

didn't. A few cancers showed big increases--lung, breast, and

melanoma--but the anticipated across-the-board cancer epidemic never

came. The environmentalists' unfulfilled prophecy largely

discredited

the view that pesticides and other toxic chemicals were cancer time

bombs.

Blaming the victim.

The smoking-lung cancer link has played a pivotal role in persuading

the

public that if you get cancer, it's your own fault. It's things

you've

done, rather than things you've been exposed to involuntarily.

A close relationship between the cancer establishment and offending

industries.

" I am not a believer in conspiracy theories, " says Epstein, " but the

fact is, the cancer establishment's relationship with many of the

industries causing cancer is simply too close, too cozy. It's a

conflict

of interest, and I believe that this conflict affects research

priorities and public awareness campaigns to the detriment of public

health. " As an example, Epstein cites the board of directors of

Memorial

Sloan-Kettering in New York City, arguably the world's finest cancer

research center. " It's chock-full of people with ties to the

chemical

and pharmaceutical industries, " Epstein says.

It's appalling that research into environmental contributors

currently

represents only a trickle in the rising flood of breast cancer

research.

And it's maddening that breast cancer detection, diagnosis, and

treatment have taken precedence over prevention. But there is some

room

for hope. Several investigators are already following up on the

Falck

and Wolff studies. Michigan's Harold Humphrey recently received a

$100,000 federal grant, part of which will be used to analyze the

PBB

content in the breast tumors of farm women in his study.

 

In addition, last October, the House Subcommittee on Health and the

Environment held hearings on organochlorine pesticides and

xenoestrogens

as causes of breast cancer, and heard testimony from several of the

researchers interviewed for this article. The hearings began just

six

days after the release of a Greenpeace report that examined the

organochlorine-breast cancer connection and called for an immediate

phaseout of organochlorines. Devra Lee Davis has recommended that

all

chemicals released into the environment be screened for estrogenic

activity, pointing out that although we have more data on the

effects of

organochlorines, other chemicals may pose equal health risks.

 

Individual women can take a few steps to reduce their personal

breast

cancer risks, but eliminating toxic breast hazards clearly requires

political action. The wheels of both science and government grind

slowly, but government is more publicly accountable, and it has

tremendous influence over the funding of breast cancer

research. " People

need to become better informed about the link between toxic

chemicals

and breast cancer, " says Falck. " Then they should start making

noise. "

 

Michael Castleman is a San Francisco medical writer. He won the 1993

American Medical Writers Association Rose Kushner Award for his

coverage

of breast cancer. Research assistance provided by Michelle Cottle.

For a

bibliography of the studies cited in this article, send a stamped,

self-addressed envelope with $2 to Mother Jones, 731 Market St.,

Suite

600, San Francisco, CA 94103.

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