Most Cancer Is Made, Not Born
For most people, cancer comes not from preprogrammed genes, but from conditions and exposures that are encountered throughout their lives.
[ Related Material ]
Subject: Most Cancer Is Made, Not Born --------
Date: Thu, 10 Aug 2000 18:52:59 -0400
From: Stephen Tvedten <steve@getipm.com>
Organization: Get Set Inc. (www.getipm.com)
To: Paul Helliker <phelliker@cdpr.ca.gov>
Director, State of
California, Department of Pesticide Regulation
Dear Mr. Helliker, I just wanted to ask you one question
- "Does your continued silence indicate that you will only allow the
untrained public to use safe and far more effective alternatives but, you STILL
will not "legally" allow your trained/licensed
"'professional" POISON applicators to use safe and far more effective
alternatives e.g., dish water rather than your dangerous "registered"
POISONS to actually control pest problems?
I also thought you might like to read an article entitled:
Most Cancer Is Made, Not Born - Yet little is spent to control avoidable
exposure to cancer-causing chemicals. By Devra Lee Davis / San Francisco
Chronicle 10aug00
LIKE A RIFLE SHOT in the middle of the night, a new study
from Scandinavia provides shocking evidence of what growing numbers of cancer
doctors have long suspected. Most cancer is made, not born. In the largest study
ever conducted among twins, published in the New England Journal of Medicine
last month, researchers found that for all cancers combined, identical twins --
sharing 100 percent of their genes -- developed the same disease about 10
percent of the time. For breast, colon and prostate cancer, both twins had the
disease between 14-30 percent of the time.
For most people, cancer comes not from preprogrammed genes,
but from conditions and exposures that are encountered throughout their lives.
When it comes to hormonal cancers, a series of studies shows the critical role
of the early environment. One study, from the London School of Hygiene and
Tropical Medicine in 1998, found that fraternal twins -- sharing only 50 percent
of their genes -- developed even more hormonal cancers than did identical twins.
Other new studies find that girls who are heavier at birth also have a greater
risk of developing breast cancer. Fraternal twins and higher birth-weight babies
are known to experience higher in utero hormone levels, which can fuel later
abnormal cell growth.
The ability of a number of persistent organic chemicals to
stoke this same growth is a matter of grave concern, according to several recent
national assessments in the United States and Europe.
Researchers in the Scandinavian study assumed that any
common cancer in twins was solely due to shared genetic defects. Cancer
certainly runs in families, but not just because of shared genes. A study in
1988 found that adopted children whose adoptive parents died of cancer had five
times the chance of getting the same disease, reflecting some common life
settings independent of inherited genes.
Smoking is the single-most important avoidable cause of
cancer and is directly responsible for 30 percent of all cases. What do this
Scandinavian study and other new reports tell us about the causes of the other
70 percent?
In the United States, deaths from all cancers are
declining, driven by sharp reductions in smoking. However, new cases of cancer
not known to be linked to cigarettes are growing -- among Generation X in the
United States, young men are developing four times more cancer and young women
are developing 50 percent more cancer than did their grandparents.
National Cancer Institute researchers have shown that rates
of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, kidney, brain, thyroid, bone marrow, liver and testes
cancer have more than doubled in the general population since the last half of
the past century. Why? These changes surely have nothing to do with sudden
shifts in inherited genetic defects.
Studies of farmers provide some clues. Although they are
generally healthier than the rest of us, farmers develop some types of cancer
more often. These same tumors that are common among farmers are becoming
increasingly common all over the world, according to reports from several
different national cancer institutes. Besides being one of the most dangerous
professions, farming includes regular contact with diesel and other engine
exhausts, pesticides, solvents and paints, animal viruses and sunlight. Could
growing general population exposures to these same materials lie behind the
rising incidence of these diseases globally?
As to diet, evidence is compelling that animal fat plays a
role in colon and prostate cancer, but mixed for breast cancer. Fat, especially
animal or dairy fat, has been called the body's own hazardous-waste site, as it
tends to attract many toxic products. As to breast cancer, contaminants in fat
could be playing an important role.
Several studies from Canada and Denmark have found that
women with the disease have much more elevated levels of some toxic residues in
their bodies in the years before diagnosis than those without the disease. Those
with the highest exposures also have the poorest prognoses. Dr. Tony Zheng and
colleagues at Yale University recently reported that women who ate the greatest
amounts of well- cooked red meat during the three years before diagnosis had
three to four times more breast cancer than those who consumed much less meat.
In addition to heterocyclic amines, known to damage genes,
could this meat also contain toxic compounds such as fat- seeking
organochlorines, or plastic contaminants migrating from food-packaging that can
cause abnormal cell growth? One clue comes from a Columbia University study,
which last month reported much higher levels of cancer-causing compounds (called
polycylic aromatic hydrocarbons) directly bound up in the DNA of those with
breast cancer.
Many of the proven causes of cancer today are hard to
control, including viruses, sunlight, medical procedures and drugs, and the
addictive bad habits of cigarette smoking, overeating, drinking alcohol and
inherited genetic defects. What we eat, where we live, how we work and play,
what we breathe, our good and bad habits -- all these affect the chances we will
develop any disease. The International Agency for Research on Cancer of the
World Health Organization (WHO) has identified more than 100 compounds, which
are regularly used today by painters, welders, electrician, plumbers and others,
that increase the risk of cancer.
Even for one of the best-studied causes of cancer that we
know of, radiation, genetics and gender make big differences in the chance the
disease will occur. A new study published in the government's journal,
Environmental Health Perspectives, and reported in the Washington Post on July
18, found that early childhood X-rays increased the risk of bone cancer about
1.6 times in all children. But, the risk that early X-rays would cause bone
cancer was six times higher in girls with a certain genetic mutations, and much
less in boys.
Some $33 billion and three decades into the War on Cancer,
the costs of treatment and worker lost-time each year run at more than $100
billion. The United States spends about five times more per patient on
chemotherapy than the United Kingdom, but survival for most common cancers does
not differ.
Investments in controlling and studying avoidable
environmental contributions to cancer remain scandalously low. The budget for
the Occupational Safety and Health Administration -- the agency charged with
protecting workers -- remains stalled, despite an expanded mandate and growing
evidence of worker hazards, many of which are shared in the general population.
Fueled by a sophisticated disinformation campaign of the
tobacco industry -- just confirmed by the WHO -- we wasted 50 years debating the
importance of cigarettes. We cannot afford to make the same mistake again.
Devra Lee Davis is a visiting professor at the Heinz
School, Carnegie Mellon University, an adviser to the United Nations and World
Bank, and a former presidential appointee of the Clinton administration.
Source: http://www.enviroweb.org/hecweb/archive/pestfile/Made-Not-Born.htm
Well Mr. Helliker, I would like to remind you that the
Pesticide Action Network found that in the last in the last eight years, the use
of your cancer-causing "registered" pesticide POISONS more than
doubled in California's agriculture industry.
I would like to point out this increase is directly due to your demand
that only "registered" POISONS can legally be used to
"professionally control" pests in California.
I am sure your Mother is real proud of you!
Shame on you for trying to compare your demand that only
"registered" POISONS can be used in California and the resulting
deaths and sickness that YOU have caused with the murders committed in your
State. The Police Department does
not demand that all differences of opinion can only be resolved with the weapons
they have registered. The Police
department allows the use of any safe and far more effective alternative you
wish to use to resolve any and all differences of opinion!
But Mr. Helliker, it is obvious that you STILL will not allow the
professional use of safe and far more effective alternatives!
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