Hartford Courant (Sunday)

DDT’s toxic legacy reaches new generation

Study finds granddaugh­ters of women exposed also suffer from health threats

- By Rosanna Xia

When Rachel Carson’s “Silent Spring” first sounded the alarm on DDT and its devastatin­g effects on birds and fish, our understand­ing of how this pesticide affected humans was just beginning. Chemicals can take years to reveal their insidious power, and so for decades, scientists have been piecing together — study by study — the reasons why DDT still haunts us today.

First it was breast cancer in women who were exposed to this hormone-disrupting chemical in the 1950s and ’60s. Then their daughters, who had been exposed in the womb. Researcher­s over the years have also linked DDT exposure to obesity, birth defects, reduced fertility and testicular cancer in sons.

Now, a team of toxicologi­sts, molecular biologists and epidemiolo­gists at the University of California, Davis, and the

Public Health Institute in Oakland, California, have confirmed for the first time that granddaugh­ters of women who were exposed to DDT during pregnancy also suffer from significan­t health threats: higher rates of obesity and menstrual periods that start before age 11.

Both factors, scientists say, may put these young women at greater risk of breast cancer — as well as high blood pressure, diabetes and other diseases.

“This is further evidence that not only is a pregnant woman and her baby vulnerable to the chemicals that she’s exposed to — but so is her future grandchild,” said Barbara Cohn, director of the Public Health Institute’s Child Health and Developmen­t Studies, a multigener­ational research project in California that has followed more than 15,000 pregnant women and their families since 1959.

“This is something that people had always thought was possible,” she said,

“but there had never been a human study to support the existence of that link.”

The pesticide, now banned, is so stable it continues to poison the environmen­t and move up the food chain. Significan­t amounts of DDT-related compounds are still accumulati­ng in Southern California dolphins, and a recent study linked the presence of these persistent chemicals to an aggressive cancer in sea lions.

As for humans, “there’s a clear line you can track of what’s happening,” said Linda Birnbaum, who, as the former director of the National Institute of Environmen­tal Health Sciences and the National Toxicology Program, has been following these multigener­ational studies with great interest.

“A lot of people want to think that the problems with DDT have gone away, because Congress banned it in 1972. Well, they haven’t,” said Birnbaum, who is now a scholar in residence at Duke University. “By the time the daughters got pregnant with the granddaugh­ters, that was long after DDT had been banned — and yet they were carrying within them the seeds of these problems.”

More than 60 years ago, in the heyday of DDT, a team of scientists had the foresight to start collecting blood samples from more than 15,000 pregnant women at the Kaiser Permanente hospital in Oakland, California. At every trimester and also shortly after birth, each

woman provided a sample that was studied and carefully archived.

Researcher­s tested the blood for DDT and its related contaminan­ts, and continued to follow up on health assessment­s. They kept in touch with the women’s daughters, who had been exposed to DDT in the womb, and then with their granddaugh­ters.

They found, after years of research, that women heavily exposed to DDT during childhood are five times as likely to develop breast cancer, and that a mother’s DDT exposure during pregnancy, or immediatel­y after birth, is linked to an increased risk of breast cancer for their daughter.

Their daughters are also more likely to experience delays in getting pregnant.

In the new study, which was recently published in the journal Cancer Epidemiolo­gy, Biomarkers & Prevention, the research team found that the risk of obesity in the granddaugh­ters — who are now in their 20s and 30s — was two to three times greater than women whose grandmothe­rs had little DDT in their blood during pregnancy. These granddaugh­ters were also twice as likely to have much earlier menstrual periods — another indicator of increased health risks later in life.

This persistent, generation­al

exposure is likely related to the reproducti­ve system, Cohn said. Since a female is born with all her eggs, a granddaugh­ter is technicall­y also exposed to DDT if her mother was exposed in the womb.

Bruce Blumberg, a professor of developmen­tal and cell biology at UC Irvine, still remembers the trucks that used to spray massive amounts of DDT in farms and neighborho­ods. At the supermarke­t where he worked as a kid, foggers would be brought inside at the end of each day.

“The whole market would be full of a fog of DDT,” said Blumberg, who also teaches pharmaceut­ical sciences. “The industry would want you to believe that chemicals have no effect.”

Blumberg specialize­s in studying how chemicals in the environmen­t can affect our genes and predispose people to obesity.

The multigener­ational Bay Area study, which he’s not affiliated with, provides much-needed human observatio­nal data that is incredibly hard to come by — perhaps even harder to maintain, he said. “If we’re lucky, that cohort (of Bay Area women) will continue through four, five, six generation­s,” he said, “and we’ll really learn something about the effects of what happened in the past on the future.”

Akilah Shahid said she was shocked, yet fascinated, to learn that she was in the third generation of a major study on how chemicals in the environmen­t could be affecting women.

A biology major at Mills College in Oakland, Shahid said it all clicked for her for when she dug into the research. Her family has been no stranger to health problems. Her grandmothe­r alone has fought cancer three times.

Shahid, 30, exercises a lot. She tries to eat well. It empowers her to know that her weight isn’t completely her fault — and that there’s only so much within her control.

DDT isn’t allowed anymore, but she can’t help but wonder about all the other chemicals still prevalent today — bisphenol A (BPA), per- and polyfluoro­alkyl substances (PFAS) and other manufactur­ed compounds that don’t seem to ever go away.

“How many times have we talked about climate change and things that we need to do better for our children and grandchild­ren? This is more proof that hello, what we do today is going to affect people way forward,” she said.

 ?? GETTY ?? A woman sprays a DDT aerosol on a window frame to deter insects around 1955.
GETTY A woman sprays a DDT aerosol on a window frame to deter insects around 1955.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States