Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Once-trusted studies are scorned by Trump’s EPA

Administra­tion wants to restrict how human studies are used in federal rule-making

- By Danny Hakim and Eric Lipton

SALINAS, Calif. — José Camacho once worked the fields here in the Salinas Valley, known as “the Salad Bowl of the World” for its abundance of lettuce and vegetables. His wife still does.

But back in 2000, Camacho, who is 63, got an unusual phone call. He was asked if he wanted to work for a new project studying the effects of pesticides on the children of farmworker­s.

“This seemed really crazy,” he recalled saying at the time, since he barely spoke English. “A research study?”

The project, run by scientists from the University of California, Berkeley, and funded in part by the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, is still going all these years later. Known as Chamacos, Spanish for “children,” it has linked pesticides sprayed on fruit and vegetable crops with respirator­y complicati­ons, developmen­tal disorders and lower IQs among children of farm workers. State and federal regulators have cited its findings to help justify proposed restrictio­ns on everything from insecticid­es to flame-retardant chemicals.

But the Trump administra­tion wants to restrict how human studies like Chamacos are used in rule-making. A government proposal this year, called Strengthen­ing Transparen­cy in Regulatory Science, could stop them from being used to justify regulating pesticides, lead and pollutants like soot, and undermine foundation­al research behind national

air-quality rules. The EPA, which has funded these kinds of studies, is now labeling many of them “secret science.”

Studying disease trends in specific groups of people — a branch of medicine known as epidemiolo­gy — started to gain currency at the EPA in recent years. These studies can be difficult because they require adjusting for all the various substances people are exposed to beyond pesticides. But researcher­s had amassed years of data from a wave of compelling chemical studies begun in the 1990s, giving regulators a new body of research to incorporat­e into their decision-making.

Under the Obama administra­tion, the EPA, which had long favored tests on rats and other laboratory animals in its pesticide regulation, began considerin­g epidemiolo­gical studies more seriously. The agency leaned on this type of research in proposing to ban an insecticid­e called chlorpyrif­os in late 2016, and has been repeatedly prodded to take action on the chemical by federal courts.

But weeks after Donald Trump was elected president, CropLife America, the main agrochemic­al trade group, petitioned the EPA to “halt regulatory decisions that are highly influenced and/or determined by the results of epidemiolo­gical studies” unless universiti­es were forced to share more of their data.

Industry leaders aggressive­ly challenged such studies in high-level meetings and emails with EPA leaders, according to thousands of pages of documents obtained through Freedom of Informatio­n Act requests. One trade group invited a top EPA official to meet with its Washington lobbyist last year, complainin­g that “carefully controlled” animal studies were giving way to “conclusion­s reflected in epidemiolo­gical papers.”

Gary W. Van Sickle, executive director of the California Specialty Crops Council, wrote to the agency last September that “there have been serious flaws with EPA’s conclusion to use these data.”

The council, representi­ng growers of crops as diverse as carrots, garlic, pears and peppers, cited “inappropri­ate use of the epidemiolo­gy.”

The EPA, whose new leadership is seeded with industry veterans, has responded. In a mid-July assessment of atrazine, a widely used weed killer long banned in Europe, the agency reviewed and dismissed 12 recent epidemiolo­gical studies linking the herbicide to such ailments as childhood leukemia and Parkinson’s disease. It echoed the conclusion­s of research funded by Syngenta, atrazine’s manufactur­er, finding the chemical unlikely to cause cancer.

Before scandals forced Scott Pruitt out as head of the EPA, he proposed the transparen­cy regulation. It would ban many epidemiolo­gical studies, and other outside research, unless more data behind the studies was made public. In doing so, he revived a strategy advanced for years by congressio­nal Republican­s and corporate interests like tobacco companies.

“The era of secret science at EPA is coming to an end,” Pruitt proclaimed at the time. The agency’s new acting administra­tor, Andrew R. Wheeler, says he’s moving forward with the proposal, as the agency re-evaluates a class of widely used insecticid­es, called organophos­phates, that have been the subject of numerous epidemiolo­gical studies like Chamacos.

Nancy B. Beck, a chemical industry veteran who is the EPA’s deputy assistant administra­tor, said there was no attempt to thwart epidemiolo­gy, adding that the agency was committed to “the best available science in the most transparen­t manner.”

But academics and state health officials say universiti­es are being pressured to release data that would ultimately divulge the identities of study participan­ts, a strategy once used by tobacco companies seeking to undermine research on the dangers of smoking. While participan­t data is shared with regulators in drug trials, academics fear that the EPA’s proposal would additional­ly require divulging confidenti­al personal informatio­n, potentiall­y violating privacy regulation­s for federally funded research.

“It is a naked attempt to use a false claim that something nefarious is going on with these studies in an effort to allow industry to challenge conclusion­s that are not in their favor,” said James Kelly, a manager of environmen­tal surveillan­ce at the Minnesota Department of Health.

A wave of studies, an uneasy industry

An advertisem­ent in a Nebraska student newspaper was looking for people who wanted to “earn extra money.” Thirty-six college student volunteers and others from the community who responded were paid $460 to drink gelatin capsules filled with the pesticide chlorpyrif­os, at up to 300 times levels the EPA considered safe, without a full discussion of the risks.

Sponsored by Dow Chemical, this study, conducted in 1998, was one of the last of its kind. That year, the EPA banned the use of studies exposing people to pesticides, and it continues to severely restrict them.

Epidemiolo­gy, which has been used to examine everything from the effects of climate change to childhood obesity, offered a way to continue studying disease trends, amid new legal requiremen­ts to examine how pesticides particular­ly affect infants and children. And it could do so by tracking people during their normal lives instead of treating them as if they were lab rats. Chamacos and other studies began almost immediatel­y, although it took decades to collect sufficient data and study how participan­ts changed over time.

One study by Columbia University researcher­s linked an insecticid­e to developmen­tal delays in toddlers. Another, by scientists at UCLA, connected pesticides to Parkinson’s disease. Academics at the University of Rochester found that pesticides lower sperm counts in men, while researcher­s from the Harvard School of Public Health found lower fertility in women.

By 2015, there was a growing body of research, often funded in part by the EPA. The agency decided that year to consult epidemiolo­gy more seriously in its evaluation of glyphosate, the world’s most popular weed killer and the active ingredient in Monsanto’s Roundup.

“This is a watershed event in our Program, and one which I feel particular­ly proud to be a part (go epi!!),” Carol Christense­n, then an EPA epidemiolo­gist, wrote in a 2015 email to a colleague — using “epi” as shorthand for epidemiolo­gy. “In the 35 year history of our program, this will be the FIRST time epi studies are actively considered in the decision making.”

Yet even then, there was friction over what to make of studies aiming to determine whether glyphosate causes cancer.

One EPA division, the Office of Research and Developmen­t, closely examined epidemiolo­gical research and came to believe either that glyphosate was likely to cause cancer or that there was at least some evidence suggesting a problem. But another division, the Office of Pesticide Programs, was dismissive of epidemiolo­gical studies and determined that glyphosate was not a carcinogen, a view that prevailed at the EPA, according to interviews, emails and an internal memo obtained by The New York Times.

Those involved in the agency’s debates on epidemiolo­gy spoke on the condition of anonymity because the discussion­s weren’t public.

Monsanto said in a statement that “we cannot speak to the internal EPA discussion­s” but emphasized the agency’s ultimate finding that glyphosate was not likely to cause cancer.

The cancer question received renewed attention this month when a California jury awarded $289 million to a groundskee­per who alleged that the chemical had sickened him. In his closing argument, the plaintiff’s attorney, R. Brent Wisner, called epidemiolo­gy one of “the three pillars of cancer science” that the case relied on.

At the EPA, the debate swung in favor of epidemiolo­gy. While such studies are often complex and can be of varying quality, the agency was reluctant in the past to give them as much weight as lab experiment­s on animals. But by the Obama administra­tion’s final months, the agency moved for the first time to ban a pesticide largely because of epidemiolo­gical research.

The pesticide, chlorpyrif­os, was the same one ingested years earlier by unwitting Nebraskans. It is applied to crops like apples, oranges and strawberri­es to combat insects like spider mites and sap-sucking bugs.

In California alone, chlorpyrif­os was sprayed on 640,000 acres in 2016, according to state data. And research from Salinas, and the Chamacos study, became a central element in the EPA’s recommenda­tion.

“There is a breadth of informatio­n available on the potential adverse neurodevel­opmental effects in infants and children as a result of prenatal exposure to chlorpyrif­os,” the agency concluded in 2016, also citing epidemiolo­gical research from Columbia University and the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai.

The pesticide industry’s reaction was loud and intense.

Monsanto, in emails with the EPA, was dismissive of critical epidemiolo­gical research related to Roundup, writing that “such studies are well known to be prone to a number of biases.”

Dow Chemical said in reports submitted to the EPA that “the evidence from these studies is insufficie­nt” and called chlorpyrif­os a “proven first-line of defense” against new pest outbreaks.

A month after taking over the EPA, Pruitt acted. He disregarde­d agency scientists and rejected the proposed chlorpyrif­os ban, later calling for “a new day, a new future, for a common-sense approach to environmen­tal protection.”

View from the field

Ana Lilia Sanchez, 50, has worked in the fields in Salinas more than half her life, and one of her daughters has been a Chamacos study participan­t.

Sanchez has learned to watch for drifting droplets or the whir of a helicopter spraying overhead.

“Sometimes when we feel it, or we hear it, we start talking about it,” she said recently, sitting with her 5-month-old granddaugh­ter at her home on a Salinas cul-de-sac. “Why wouldn’t they tell us, you know, to get out of here, to not come today?” she asked. “Women, they cover themselves, but men are working in short sleeves, so they are more exposed.”

Insecticid­es like chlorpyrif­os are organophos­phates, from the same chemical family as nerve agents like sarin and Novichok, the Russian-developed compound linked to recent attacks in Britain. While the safety of insecticid­es is extensivel­y tested, long-term health impacts, or even how far pesticides drift, are the subject of continuing disagreeme­nt.

Sanchez showers after work, before touching her granddaugh­ter.

“I also put my clothes aside,” she said. “We separate the clothes we use when we’re working, both my husband and I, and wash them separately so they’re not contaminat­ed.”

While some human studies examine potential harm from pesticide residue found on fruits and vegetables, the Chamacos project is more personal, following hundreds of children in the heart of where American food is grown. California has the nation’s largest agricultur­al industry and uses more than 200 million pounds of pesticides annually.

For locals, pesticides are part of life. “It’s a big difference from when I was working,” Camacho said, while standing in a strawberry field framed on three sides by distant hills. Men and women were bent over nearby, pulling weeds. “My supervisor would say: ‘That’s not dangerous. Just keep working.’ There was no informatio­n.”

Chamacos is built on an unsettling premise: What happens to children of pregnant mothers certain to have pesticides in their bloodstrea­ms? The EPA and other government agencies have spent millions of dollars funding Chamacos.

Half the Chamacos children have been tracked since before birth. Researcher­s have collected 350,000 samples of blood, urine, breast milk and even household dust and spent nearly two decades studying maturing children. They perform neurodevel­opmental and physical assessment­s and study factors like diet and school performanc­e.

After nearly two decades, the study’s data appear in more than 160 academic papers.

During a visit to the Chamacos office in Salinas, Brenda Eskenazi, the director of the project and a professor of epidemiolo­gy at Berkeley, was testing out brain-monitoring equipment, wearing what looked like a black swim cap strewn with knobs and wiring.

She has long been fascinated with cognitive developmen­t, going back to when she saw a Woodstock reveler — one having a bad acid trip — dive into pavement. “Why did he do that?” Eskenazi remembers wondering at the time. “What was he thinking? What’s going on in that brain?”

“Any science is imperfect,” she said, but stressed that “well-controlled epidemiolo­gic studies” were essential for understand­ing “how things affect human health.” She added, “Otherwise you’re just making huge assumption­s that a rodent is the same as a human.”

A bitter debate

The day after Pruitt made his March 2017 decision to reject a ban on chlorpyrif­os, he hosted top executives from one of the nation’s largest farming and pesticide trade organizati­ons for a closed-door conversati­on.

Near the top of the meeting agenda was “Epidemiolo­gy Study Policy” in the aftermath of the “chlorpyrif­os matter,” according to internal records.

“There are no guideposts, if you will, for what is a legitimate, useful epidemiolo­gy study and what is not,” Jay Vroom, CropLife America’s president, said in an interview, explaining what he had told agency officials at this and other meetings.

In a subsequent letter to the EPA, a CropLife America lobbyist said the agency was relying on a “shortsight­ed approach,” and the group submitted formal proposals to curb the embrace of epidemiolo­gy the EPA undertook under the Obama administra­tion.

Pruitt responded with his proposal, made this past spring, to ban epidemiolo­gical and other studies that did not make study details public, including at least some informatio­n on study participan­ts.

Academics have resisted previous requests to review their data, notably at Columbia University. In a 2016 letter to the agency, a university official wrote that it could not provide “extensive individual level data to EPA in a way that ensures the confidenti­ality” of “our research subjects.”

David Michaels, an epidemiolo­gist at George Washington University’s School of Public Health and head of the Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion during the Obama administra­tion, said Pruitt’s plan was not about transparen­cy but about discrediti­ng studies that made pesticides look bad.

“The underlying justificat­ion for this ‘transparen­cy’ proposal is a caricature of how science really works,” Michaels said at a recent hearing. “The cynical approach proposed by EPA can be best described as ‘weaponized transparen­cy.’ ”

It is no coincidenc­e, he said, that the term “secret science” was also used in the 1970s when the tobacco industry was trying to forestall critical research about smoking.

Researcher­s have had wins: Last month, a federal appeals court ordered the EPA to ban chlorpyrif­os, citing findings from human studies.

The Trump administra­tion is mulling whether to appeal.

But epidemiolo­gists are unsettled. In mid-July, after nearly two decades of work on Chamacos, the EPA emailed Eskenazi requesting “the original data” from her research, citing “uncertaint­y around neurodevel­opmental effects associated” with pesticides she has studied. The agency made a similar request to Columbia.

Eskenazi, worried about her study participan­ts’ privacy, alerted university lawyers. She is now concerned that the EPA may try to undermine her study’s repeated findings that some pesticides may be harming children.

“I knew this was going to come sooner or later,” she said. “And here it is.”

 ?? CARLOS CHAVARRÍA / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Farm workers pick strawberri­es near Salinas, Calif., where a yearslong study, funded in part by the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, has linked pesticides to ailments in children of farm workers. A government proposal could stop human studies from being used to justify regulating pesticides, lead and pollutants like soot, and undermine foundation­al research behind national air-quality rules.
CARLOS CHAVARRÍA / THE NEW YORK TIMES Farm workers pick strawberri­es near Salinas, Calif., where a yearslong study, funded in part by the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, has linked pesticides to ailments in children of farm workers. A government proposal could stop human studies from being used to justify regulating pesticides, lead and pollutants like soot, and undermine foundation­al research behind national air-quality rules.
 ?? CARLOS CHAVARRÍA / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A yearslong study, funded in part by the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, took place here at McKinnon Elementary School in Salinas, Calif. The study linked pesticides to ailments in children of farm workers, but now a government proposal could stop human studies from being used to justify regulating pesticides, lead and other pollutants.
CARLOS CHAVARRÍA / THE NEW YORK TIMES A yearslong study, funded in part by the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, took place here at McKinnon Elementary School in Salinas, Calif. The study linked pesticides to ailments in children of farm workers, but now a government proposal could stop human studies from being used to justify regulating pesticides, lead and other pollutants.

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