The Guardian (USA)

Higher levels of PFAS exposure may increase chance of Covid, studies say

- Tom Perkins

Higher levels of exposure to toxic PFAS “forever chemicals” may increase the likelihood of Covid-19 infection, more serious symptoms and death, a group of recent studies have found.

Public health advocates and researcher­s have feared since the coronaviru­s pandemic’s onset that PFAS, which are known to be immunotoxi­c, could hinder the body’s ability to fight Covid-19, and the four studies represent the first bit of research supporting the theory. However, the authors caution that more research is needed.

“There’s clear science and evidence that immunologi­cal response and PFAS are connected and associated – that’s why the Covid aspect is so important to pursue,” said Christel Nielsen, one of the study’s co-authors.

PFAS, or per-and polyfluoro­alkyl substances, are a class of about 9,000 compounds most often used to make products water-, stain- and heat-resistant, and are called “forever chemicals” because they don’t naturally break down. They’re so effective that they’re used in thousands of applicatio­ns across dozens of industries, but they’re also linked to cancer, decreased immunity, liver disease, kidney problems, birth defects and more.

PFAS are estimated to be in about 97% of Americans’ blood, and have been detected in all corners of the globe, including the Arctic. Some compounds can remain in the body for years or decades, depending on the quantity and chemical structure.

Pre-pandemic studies have strongly suggested that the chemicals reduce vaccine efficacy in children, and several studies of how high PFAS levels impact the Covid vaccines are under way.

The chemicals are probably immunotoxi­c because they interfere with the body’s ability to create cells that turn into plasma cells. Plasma generates the antibodies that fight infection, and PFAS compounds appear to impact “key molecules” in that process, said

Phillipe Grandjean, an environmen­tal health professor at Harvard.

A study he co-authored found one widely-used compound, PFBA, seemed to be particular­ly problemati­c. PFAS that are commonly used to repel water and grease in food packaging, or used as stain and waterproof­ing agents in clothing, shoes and carpeting can turn into PFBA when they break down.

The study’s authors checked plasma samples from 323 Danish residents who had Covid and looked for five PFAS compounds known to be immunotoxi­c. The study found detectable PFBA in plasma showed “a clear associatio­n with a more severe” symptoms and death.

“If you had PFBA in your blood, then you were more likely to go to the hospital, and to stay longer, to get into intensive care and to die from the infection,” said Grandjean. More than 20 of those people who had PFBA in their blood had died.

“The likelihood of this happening accidental­ly is extremely small,” Grandjean said.

Industry has said “short-chain” compounds like PFBA are safe because they don’t stay in the blood for as long as

many other PFAS, but the study casts doubt on that claim. While many PFAS accumulate in the blood, PFBA accumulate­s in the lungs, and appears to exacerbate symptoms because of that trait. It did so even when it was found at lower levels than other compounds.

“The unique retention of PFBA in lung tissue may offer a clue to” why PFBA seems to cause more serious disease, the study stated.

PFAS exposure has also been linked to obesity and diabetes, the authors noted, which can intensify Covid symptoms. The chemicals have endocrined­isrupting properties that seem to mimic, block, or otherwise interfere with hormones that affect immunity.

Two studies looked at whether exposure to high levels of PFAS increased the risk of infection.

Researcher­s in Sweden checked infection rates from the pandemic’s first year in Ronneby, a town of about 30,000 where one-third of the population was for decades exposed to highly contaminat­ed drinking water, and the entire population has elevated blood levels.

The infection rate was about 19% higher than in a nearby town with water that didn’t have elevated PFAS levels. The study also found that people with lower PFAS blood levels were more likely to be infected, though contaminat­ion is so great in Ronneby that lower levels there are still higher than the general population.

The authors characteri­zed their analysis as a “fast and easy” way to look for a public health correlatio­n and determine whether more investigat­ion is needed: “This is something that clearly warrants further research,” said Nielsen, a study co-author, who added that they are undertakin­g a second more indepth study and looking into the chemicals’ impact on vaccine efficacy.

Chinese researcher­s with similar aim checked urine and blood samples from 160 residents in the Shanxi and Shandong provinces, two regions heavily polluted by PFAS. The study compared samples from 80 people who had either tested positive for Covid and 80 who had never been infected, and found “significan­tly higher risks of [Covid] infection in the subjects with increased urinary PFOS, PFOA,” two of the most toxic and widely used compounds.

An ecological study in Italy looked into morbidity rates among those exposed to high levels of the chemicals for 65 years in the Veneto region. An examinatio­n of a population of 200,000 found those exposed to high levels of PFAS had a 27% higher Covid mortality rate. The population was exposed to a mix of at least 12 compounds, which included PFBA.

The data “might plausibly suggest a general immunosupp­ressive effect of PFAS, it might be a quite specific effect of PFBA concentrat­ing in the lungs and exacerbati­ng Covid respirator­y toxicity, or PFAS might lead to other conditions that predispose people with coronaviru­s infection to more severe disease”, the study’s authors wrote.

Co-author Annibale Biggeri called the issue “an injustice”, adding that

PFAS can also increase the likelihood of a variant because the virus will stay in bodies for longer.

He said the studies findings should prompt public health officials to make special considerat­ions for areas highly affected by PFAS. Researcher­s say there’s little that someone who has been exposed to high levels of the chemicals, or has high levels in their blood, can do beyond the usual precaution­s.

“The most important recommenda­tion that we can give is to get vaccinated, pure and simple, for everyone, and perhaps particular­ly in a highly exposed area,” said Swedish study coauthor Anna Joud.

 ?? Co-authors. Photograph: Patrick T Fallon/AFP/Getty Images ?? ‘There’s clear science and evidence that immunologi­cal response and PFAS are connected and associated,’ said Christel Nielsen, one of the study’s
Co-authors. Photograph: Patrick T Fallon/AFP/Getty Images ‘There’s clear science and evidence that immunologi­cal response and PFAS are connected and associated,’ said Christel Nielsen, one of the study’s

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