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Health of greenspace workers: Morbidity and mortality data from the AGRICAN cohort.

de Graaf et al,

2022

Environ Res

A study of 6,247 greenspace workers (landscapers, gardeners, groundskeepers) from the French AGRICAN cohort found significantly elevated cancer risks compared to farmers and non-agricultural workers. Male greenspace workers showed 15% higher overall cancer incidence, with particularly elevated risks for prostate cancer (21% increase), thyroid cancer (184% increase), testicular cancer (298% increase), and skin melanoma (115% increase), while female greenspace workers had a 71% increased risk of breast cancer. The study also found that greenspace workers reported more allergic diseases and, among males, more depression compared to other occupational groups. These findings highlight that greenspace workers face distinct occupational health risks, likely related to pesticide exposure and other workplace hazards, and should be studied separately from agricultural workers rather than being grouped together in research.

Testosterone therapy and risk of breast cancer development: a systematic review.

Ray et al,

2020

Curr Opin Urol

A systematic review identifying 22 cases of breast cancer in individuals on testosterone replacement therapy (TRT) found that 18 cases occurred in female-to-male (FtM) transgender individuals and only 4 in cisgender men, with testosterone treatment duration ranging from 5 weeks to 25 years at the time of diagnosis. The review noted a relatively higher incidence of breast cancer in FtM individuals on hormone therapy compared to cisgender men on TRT, though the small sample size prevents definitive conclusions about whether testosterone directly increases breast cancer risk or whether it should be contraindicated in those with prior breast cancer history. These findings highlight an important knowledge gap regarding the long-term cancer risks of gender-affirming hormone therapy and the need for larger, prospective studies to better understand the relationship between testosterone treatment and breast cancer development.

Exposure to organophosphorus insecticides and increased risks of health and cancer in US women.

Sun et al,

2020

Environ Toxicol Pharmacol

This analysis of US health data from 2003-2012 found that women with higher long-term exposure to organophosphorus insecticides (common pesticides measured through urine samples) faced significantly elevated health risks, including three times higher risk of cardiovascular disease and 2.7 times higher overall cancer risk among women aged 60-85. Women with higher pesticide exposure also showed increased risks of asthma in younger age groups and chronic bronchitis in older age, with breast cancer risk elevated among female smokers and prostate cancer risk elevated among male smokers. These findings suggest that chronic exposure to these widely-used agricultural pesticides may pose greater health threats to women than men, particularly for cardiovascular disease and cancer.

Occupational exposure to organic solvents and risk of male breast cancer: a European multicenter case-control study.

Laouali et al,

2018

Scand J Work Environ Health

A European multicenter case-control study of 104 male breast cancer cases and 1,901 controls found that high cumulative lifetime exposure to trichloroethylene (>23.9 ppm-years) was associated with a 110% increased male breast cancer risk compared to non-exposure, with the association persisting when only exposures occurring 10 or more years before diagnosis were considered, indicating a true latency effect. The study also suggested possible roles for benzene and ethylene glycol in male breast cancer risk, though no clear dose-response relationships were observed for these chemicals. These findings are particularly important given that male breast cancer is rare, often diagnosed at later stages, and has worse prognosis than female breast cancer, and they add to evidence that occupational solvent exposures—particularly trichloroethylene used in metal degreasing, dry cleaning, and industrial cleaning—may be underrecognized risk factors for breast cancer in both men and women, warranting stricter workplace exposure limits and enhanced surveillance of workers in high-exposure industries.

Elevated risk for male breast cancer after occupational exposure to gasoline and vehicular combustion products.

Hansen et al,

2000

Am J Indust Med

This Danish nationwide study of 230 male breast cancer cases found that men occupationally exposed to gasoline and its combustion products had a 2.5 times higher risk of breast cancer, with the risk rising to 5.4 times higher among men first exposed before age 40. Gasoline contains several known carcinogens including benzene and produces cancer-causing combustion products, which may explain this elevated risk. Since male breast cancer is rare but shares similar biology with female breast cancer, these findings suggest that gasoline exposure may also increase breast cancer risk in women and warrant further investigation in female workers.

Exposure to Pesticides and Breast Cancer in an Agricultural Region in Brazil.

Panis et al,

2024

Ecotoxicol Public Health

A case-control study of 758 women in southwestern Paraná, Brazil—a region with intensive pesticide use and 41% higher breast cancer rates than the national average—found that even women not working in fields but handling contaminated equipment and laundry tested positive for Glyphosate, atrazine, and 2,4-D. While the overall breast cancer risk association with pesticide exposure was non-significant after adjustment (OR = 1.30), exposed women had significantly higher risk of lymph node metastasis (OR = 2.19; 95% CI: 1.31-3.72), indicating more aggressive disease. These findings suggest pesticide exposure in agricultural communities may be associated with development of more aggressive breast cancer, highlighting the need for monitoring both occupational and household pesticide exposure in rural populations.

Effects of Developmental Lead and Phthalate Exposures on DNA Methylation in Adult Mouse Blood, Brain, and Liver: A Focus on Genomic Imprinting by Tissue and Sex

Morgan et al,

2024

Environ Health Perspect

A mouse study examining DNA methylation changes from lead and DEHP (phthalate) exposure during pregnancy and early development found that the brain (cerebral cortex) showed the most epigenetic changes (66% for lead, 57% for DEHP), with alterations concentrated in gene regulatory regions that control gene expression. The research identified imprinted genes—particularly Gnas and Grb10—as targets of both chemical exposures across multiple tissues, with some DNA methylation signatures in blood matching those in target organs like liver and brain, suggesting blood tests could potentially detect toxic exposures affecting other organs. Notably, lead exposure caused consistent hypermethylation of the Grb10 gene’s control region in both blood and liver of male offspring, providing preliminary evidence that epigenetic changes in easily accessible blood samples might serve as biomarkers for chemical exposures affecting critical organs like the brain. These findings are significant for breast cancer prevention because early-life exposures to lead and phthalates can alter epigenetic programming in ways that may increase disease risk decades later, and identifying blood-based biomarkers could enable early detection of harmful exposures during vulnerable developmental windows.

Effect of mistimed eating patterns on breast and prostate cancer risk (MCC-Spain Study).

Kogevinas et al,

2018

Int J Cancer

A population-based case-control study in Spain (2008-2013) including 621 prostate cancer cases, 1,205 breast cancer cases, and 2,193 controls who never worked night shifts examined whether meal timing is associated with cancer risk while accounting for lifestyle factors and chronotype (morning vs. evening preference). Participants who waited two or more hours between supper and sleep had a 20% reduced risk of breast and prostate cancer combined (OR = 0.80; 95% CI: 0.67-0.96) compared to those sleeping immediately after eating, with individual reductions of 26% for prostate cancer and 16% for breast cancer; similarly, eating supper before 9 pm versus after 10 pm showed protective effects, with stronger associations among those adhering to cancer prevention recommendations (OR = 0.65) and morning chronotypes (OR = 0.66). These findings suggest that adhering to diurnal eating patterns—particularly maintaining a long interval between the last meal and sleep—is associated with lower breast and prostate cancer risk, independent of diet quality and other lifestyle factors. The study highlights the emerging importance of meal timing and circadian rhythm alignment in cancer prevention, indicating that when we eat may be as important as what we eat, and suggesting that late-night eating close to bedtime may disrupt metabolic and hormonal processes that influence cancer development.

Implication of dietary phthalates in breast cancer. A systematic review.

Zuccarello et al,

2018

Food Chem Tox

A systematic review of 25 studies examining phthalates (plastic chemicals) and breast cancer found that while laboratory studies show certain phthalates can activate estrogen receptors and promote cancer cell growth, epidemiological studies in humans have produced mixed and inconclusive results. The main source of phthalate exposure is through diet—particularly from food and beverages in plastic packaging—but current human studies have significant limitations in how they measure exposure and account for other risk factors. The review calls for better-designed future studies that use hair samples instead of urine for more accurate long-term exposure assessment, include dietary factors and genetic markers as confounders, and investigate phthalates’ effects beyond just estrogen-driven cancers to include all breast cancer subtypes.

Cohort profile: Norwegian offshore Petroleum workers (Nopw) cohort

Stenehjem et al,

2020

Epidemiol

This study of Norwegian offshore petroleum workers found that both male and female workers had increased overall cancer risk (7% and 13% increased risk, respectively), with particularly notable elevations for specific cancers. Male workers showed more than double the risk of pleural cancer (138% increase) and male breast cancer (118% increase), plus a 20% increased risk of prostate cancer, while female workers had 62% increased risk of melanoma and nearly quadruple the risk of acute myeloid leukemia (276% increase). These findings suggest that occupational exposures in the offshore petroleum industry—including potential exposure to chemicals, radiation, shift work, and other workplace hazards—may contribute to elevated cancer risks across multiple organ sites in both men and women.

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