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Occup Environ Med doi:10.1136/oem.2006.028100

Brain tumors and exposure to pesticides: a case-control study in southwestern France

  1. Dorothée PROVOST
  1. Laboratoire Santé Travail Environnement - Université Bordeaux 2, France
    1. Anne GRUBER
    1. Laboratoire Santé Travail Environnement - Université Bordeaux 2, France
      1. LEBAILLY Pierre
      1. GRECAN, Centre François Baclesse, Université de Caen, France
        1. Anne JAFFRE
        1. Laboratoire Santé Travail Environnement - Université Bordeaux 2, France
          1. Véronique LOYANT
          1. GRECAN, Centre François Baclesse, Université de Caen, France
            1. Hugues LOISEAU
            1. Service de Neurochirurgie, CHU Pellegrin, Bordeaux, France
              1. Anne VITAL
              1. Laboratoire d'anatomopathologie, Université Bordeaux 2, France
                1. Patrick BROCHARD
                1. Laboratoire Santé Travail Environnement - Université Bordeaux 2, France
                  1. Isabelle BALDI (isabelle.baldi{at}isped.u-bordeaux2.fr)
                  1. Laboratoire Santé Travail Environnement - Université Bordeaux 2, France
                    • Published Online First 30 May 2007

                    Abstract

                    Objectives: Brain tumors are often disabling and rapidly lethal; their etiology is largely unknown. Among potential risk factors, pesticides are suspected. We examined the relationship between exposure to pesticides and brain tumors in adults in a population-based case-control study in southwestern France. Methods: Between May 1999 and April 2001, 221 incident cases of brain tumors and 442 individually matched controls selected from the general population were enrolled. Histories of occupational and environmental exposures, medical and lifestyle information were collected. A cumulative index of occupational exposure to pesticides was created, based on expert review of life-long jobs and tasks. Separate analyses were performed for gliomas and meningiomas. Results: A non statistically significant increase in risk was found for brain tumors when considering all types of occupational exposure to pesticides (OR=1.29, 95% Confidence Interval=0.87-1.91) and slightly higher but still non statistically significant when considering gliomas separately (OR=1.47, 95%CI=0.81-2.66). In the highest quartile of the cumulative index, a significant association was observed for brain tumors (OR=2.16, 95%CI=1.10-4.23), and for gliomas (OR=3.21, 95%CI=1.13-9.11), but not for meningiomas. Concerning environmental exposure to pesticides, a significant increase in risk was also observed with treatment of home plants (OR=2.24, 95%CI=1.16-4.30). Conclusions: These data suggest that a high level of occupational exposure to pesticides might be associated with an excess in risk of brain tumors, and especially of gliomas.

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