Pesticide and Environmental Update
Pesticides,
Cleansers, Dioxins etc. and Breast Cancer
What
Causes Breast Cancer?
Breast cancer kills 46,000 women in the U.S. each year. On average,
each of these women has her life cut short by 20 years, for a total loss
of about a million person-years of productive life each year. Of course
this huge cost to society is heaped on even greater burdens, the personal
anguish and suffering, the motherless children, the shattered families.
The medical establishment dominated by male doctors pretends that the
breast cancer epidemic will one day be reversed by some miracle cure,
which we have now been promised for 50 years. Until that miracle arrives,
we are told, there is nothing to be done except slice off women's breasts,
pump their bodies full of toxic chemicals to kill cancer cells, burn them
with radiation, and bury our dead. Meanwhile, the normal public health
approach primary prevention languishes without mention and without
funding. We know what causes the vast majority of cancers: exposure to
carcinogens. What would a normal public health approach entail? Reduce the
burden of cancer by reducing our exposure to carcinogens. One key idea has
defined public health for more than 100 years: PREVENTION. But with
cancer, everything is different. In the case of cancer, prevention has
been banished from polite discussion.
Now a new, fully-documented book[1], by physician Janette D. Sherman,
poses a fundamental challenge to all the doctors and researchers and
health bureaucrats who have turned their backs on cancer prevention:
"If cancers are not caused by chemicals, endocrine-disrupting
chemicals, and ionizing radiation, what are the causes? How else can one
explain the doubling, since 1940, of a woman's likelihood of developing
breast cancer, increasing in tandem with prostate and childhood
cancers?," Dr. Sherman asks.(pg. x) And if exposures are the problem,
then ending exposures is the solution: "Actual prevention means
eliminating factors that cause cancer in the first place."(pg. 31)
Dr. Sherman is a practicing physician who has treated 8000 patients
over 30 years. Unlike most physicians, she possesses an extensive
knowledge of chemistry. Furthermore, she has become a historian by
examining a large body of medical and public health literature dating back
to the 19th century. It is this unique combination -- of historical view,
knowledge of chemistry, deep personal experience as a physician, and an
ethical clarity that PRIMARY PREVENTION is the proper policy -- that makes
this book important and compelling.
The book begins with two chapters emphasizing the similarities among
all living things that are made up of cells including humans, animals and
plants. Cells in every creature can go awry and start to grow
uncontrollably, a definition of cancer. Because all cell-based creatures
are so similar, what we learn from one can often tell us something useful
about another. For example, when we learn from the Smithsonian Institution
that sharks get cancer from swimming in waters contaminated with
industrial chemicals, we learn (or SHOULD learn) something useful about
our own vulnerability to exotic chemicals.(pg. 9)
Turning to breast cancer, Dr. Sherman lists the known "risk
factors" the common characteristics shared by many women who get
breast cancer: early menarche (age at which menstruation begins); late
menopause (age at which menstruation ends); late childbirth and the birth
of few or no children; no experience breast-feeding; obesity; high fat
diet; being tall; having cancer of the ovaries or uterus; use of oral
contraceptives; excessive use of alcohol.
"What is the message running through all of these 'risks?'"
Dr. Sherman asks. "Hormones, hormones, and hormones. Hormones of the
wrong kind, hormones too soon in a girl's life, hormones for too many
years in a woman's life, too many chemicals with hormonal action, and too
great a total hormonal load."(pg. 20)
Dr. Sherman then turns her focus to the one fully-established cause of
breast (and other) cancers: ionizing radiation, from x-rays, and from
nuclear power plant emissions and the radioactive fallout from A-bomb
tests.
These, then, are the environmental factors that give rise to breast
cancer: exposures to cancer-causing chemicals, to hormonally-active
chemicals, and to ionizing radiation in air, food and water. How do we
know the environment air, food, water and ionizing radiation plays an
important role in causing breast cancer? Because when Asian women move
from their homelands to the U.S., their breast cancer rate soars. There is
something in the environment of the U.S. (and other western industrial
countries) causing an epidemic of this hormone-related disease. The
medical research establishment likes to call it "lifestyle
factors" but it's really environment. Air, food, water, ionizing
radiation.
With this basic information in hand, Dr. Sherman then describes
historically and today the exposure of women in the U.S. to a flood of
carcinogenic and hormonally active chemicals, plus ionizing radiation.
Take common pharmaceutical products, for example. Canadian researchers
have demonstrated enhanced cancer growth in mice given daily
HUMAN-EQUIVALENT doses of three commonly-used antihistamines, which are
sold under the trade names Claritin, Histamil and Atarax.(pg. 21) Two
years earlier the same researchers had reported breast cancer promotion in
rodents fed clinically-relevant doses of antidepressant drugs, which are
marketed as Elavil and Prozac.(pg. 21) Millions of women in the U.S. are
taking these drugs today.
At least 5 million women in the U.S. are currently taking Premarin the
most often-prescribed form of estrogen (female sex hormone), to ease the
transition through menopause.(pg. 156) This is called "hormone
replacement therapy" and it is routine, recommended medical practice
in the U.S. A review of 51 studies of women taking hormone replacement
therapy showed that those who never took hormones had a breast cancer rate
ranging from 18 to 63 per 1000 women. Those who took hormones for five
years showed an excess of 2 breast cancers per 1000 women; after 10 years
of hormone therapy the excess breast cancer rate rose to 6 per 1000. The
danger largely disappears 5 years after discontinuing use.
Hormones are big business. Despite evidence that synthetic hormones
caused cancer in rodents and rabbits, American drug companies began
selling synthetic hormones in 1934 in cosmetics, drugs, food additives,
and animal feed. The best-known is DES (diethylstilbestrol) but there were
and still are many others. The National Cancer Institute (NCI) in 1938
published a study showing that DES caused breast cancer in rodents. Three
years later, in 1941, NCI published a second study confirming that DES
caused breast cancer in rodents. That year the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) approved DES for commercial use in women.(pg. 91)
DES is 400 times as potent as natural estrogen and can be made for
pennies per pill. It was therefore phenomenally profitable and researchers
aggressively sought new uses. DES soon was being used to prevent
miscarriages, as a "morning after" pill to prevent pregnancies,
and as a breast-enlargement cream. It wasn't long before researchers
discovered that they could make chickens, cows and pigs grow faster if
they fed them hormones, and a huge new market for hormones opened up. As
early as 1947, a hormonal effect was reported among U.S. women who ate
chicken treated with growth hormones. (Chapter 7, note 55.) Between 1954
and 1973 three quarters of all beef cattle slaughtered in the U.S. grew
fat on DES.
In 1971, human cancer from DES exposure was confirmed and in 1973 DES
was banned from meat, so other growth hormones were substituted. Most
recently, of course, the U.S. FDA has allowed the U.S. milk supply to be
modified to increase the levels of a growth hormone (called IGF-1) known
to stimulate growth of breast cells in women. (pg. 101)
Still today most U.S. beef, chickens and pigs are intentionally
contaminated with growth hormones which is why Europeans refuse to allow
the import of U.S. beef. European scientists are asking the same question
that Dr. Sherman raises: "[H] ormones are administered to meat
animals to promote growth and weight gain. Why should humans expect to not
respond similarly to such chemical stimuli?"(pgs. 16-17)
Then of course there are dozens probably, in fact hundreds of household
chemicals and industrial byproducts that are hormonally active:
pesticides, cleansers, solvents, plasticizers, surfactants, dyes,
cosmetics, PCBs, dioxins, and so forth, that interfere with, or mimic,
naturally-occurring hormones. We are awash in these, at low levels, from
conception until death.
How many growth-stimulating and cancer-promoting hormones can we ingest
or absorb through our lungs and skin before we feel the effects? No one in
authority is asking that crucial question, but Janette Sherman is asking
it, pointedly, and armed to the teeth with scientific evidence.
Then there is radioactivity. In 1984, a study of Mormon families in
Utah downwind from the nuclear tests in Nevada reported elevated numbers
of breast cancers.(pg. 65) Girls who survived the bombing of Hiroshima are
now dying in excessive numbers from breast cancer. Dr. John Gofman has
reviewed 22 separate studies confirming unequivocally that exposure to
ionizing radiation causes breast cancer. (See REHN #693.) Janette Sherman
does a good job of summarizing ecological studies showing that women
living near nuclear power plants suffer from elevated numbers of breast
cancers. These studies, by their nature, are suggestive and not
conclusive. but there is ample reason to believe that all nuclear power
plants leak radioactivity routinely into local air and water and that any
exposure to ionizing radiation increases a woman's danger of breast
cancer. The only way to PREVENT this problem is to end nuclear power
permanently.
Why has the U.S. turned its back on the preventive approach to cancer?
Dr. Sherman returns to this question throughout her book. For example, in
a devastating chapter on Tamoxifen (a known cancer-causing chemical now
approved by U.S. FDA for use in women), she asks, "Why is our primary
well-funded National Cancer Institute not devoting its efforts to primary
prevention? Has breast cancer, like so many aspects of our culture, become
just another business opportunity?"(pg. 149)
In the end, Dr. Sherman reaches a conclusion about that question:
"There is a massing, in a few hands, of the control of production,
distribution and use of pharmaceutical drugs and appliances; control of
the sale and use of medical and laboratory tests; the consolidation and
control of hospitals, nursing homes, and home care providers. We are no
longer people who become sick. We have become markets. Is it any wonder
that prevention receives so little attention? Cancer is a big and
successful business!" (pg. 207)
And, finally: "Reflecting on the purpose of the corporation to
sell products and services and maximize profits, it becomes apparent that
prevention cannot be in the interest of the bottom line. What a sad and
bitter realization," she concludes.(pg. 228)
Despite this sad and bitter conclusion, this is a powerful upbeat book
about what citizens can and must do to end the epidemic of cancer that is
sweeping the western world. If the truth shall set us free, this book is
an important part of our collective liberation, freeing us from the lies
and deceptions, the false promises of cancer cures always "just
around the corner." Cancer is caused by exposure to carcinogens. The
way to solve the cancer problem is to prevent exposures. This means we
must end nuclear power, and demand clean food, water and air. Janette
Sherman's contribution has been to give us a wealth of powerful evidence
on which to act. Now it is up to us. --Peter Montague
[1] Janette D. Sherman, LIFE'S DELICATE BALANCE; THE CAUSES AND
PREVENTION OF BREAST CANCER (New York and London: Taylor and Francis,
2000). ISBN 1-56032-870-3.
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