The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Toxic gas above risk level near Cobb plant

Ethylene oxide in area tests at 10 times over cancer risk threshold.

- By Meris Lutz mlutz@ajc.com

‘I very much doubt that the values seen in these measuremen­ts are anything other than a background measuremen­t.’

Barry Ryan

Environmen­tal exposure expert at Emory’s Rollins School of Public Health

Limited air testing near a closed medical sterilizat­ion plant in Cobb County found elevated levels of ethylene oxide, a carcinogen­ic gas that has caused public protests and town hall meetings around facilities that use the gas.

The readings in Cobb were more

than 10 times above the threshold federal regulators say poses long-term elevated cancer risk.

The test results were, however, largely in line with higher-than-expected background levels of ethylene oxide found across the country, and probably did not represent emissions from Cobb’s Sterigenic­s plant, experts said.

“I very much doubt that the values seen in these measuremen­ts are anything other than a background measuremen­t,”

Barry Ryan, an environmen­tal exposure expert at Emory’s Rollins School of Public Health, wrote in an email. The “concentrat­ions noted near operating facilities tend to be higher than these values.”

Ryan’s conclusion­s were echoed by Kyle Steenland, an epidemiolo­gist at Emory who authored an influentia­l study linking eth

ylene oxide to cancer.

The readings from Cobb were significan­tly lower than those taken in Covington where a similar sterilizat­ion facility owned by Becton Dickinson is currently operating. Those readings prompted BD to enter into a consent order with the state imposing additional oversight.

Medical sterilizer­s, including Sterigenic­s and BD, have come under increased scrutiny since the federal government concluded ethylene oxide is much more dangerous than previously thought.

The issue came to a boil over the summer after Georgia Health News and WebMD published a joint report highlighti­ng potential increased cancer risks in areas surroundin­g the plants.

Sterigenic­s closed in August to install new pollution controls, after its ethylene oxide emissions sparked protests but before air samples were collected. The facility remains closed pending permit approvals from the county. It is unclear when it will reopen.

Some three dozen samples taken in Cobb by the state Environmen­tal Protection Division between September and November averaged about .29 micrograms of ethylene oxide per cubic meter of air. The federal Environmen­tal Protection Agency says long-term exposure to anything higher than 0.02 micrograms per cubic meter presents an unacceptab­le health risk resulting in more than 100 cancer cases per million people.

EPD spokesman Kevin Chambers wrote in an email that while there is no way to know for certain, the agency believes it is unlikely that the ethylene oxide readings from Cobb are heavily influenced by Sterigenic­s operations before it closed in August.

“Unfortunat­ely, almost all ambient air quality monitoring conducted in Georgia and across the country has been above the U.S. EPA risk level,” Chambers said. “These sites are all existing, long-term U.S. EPA air monitoring locations in a wide variety of urban and rural settings and all far exceeded .02 U.S. EPA risk level.”

Georgia’s ethylene oxide test results were recently revised after Eastern Research Group, the contractor that processed the samples, tweaked its methodolog­y. Some values were revised upward, others downward. Most samples previously marked “nondetect” provided measurable ethylene oxide concentrat­ions.

Richard Peltier, an expert in air pollution exposure at the University of Massachuse­tts, Amherst, said scientists are always trying to assess background concentrat­ions of ethylene oxide. “Even with improved detection limits, these (ethylene oxide) values are still well above what EPA considers safe for lifetime exposures,” he wrote of the Cobb monitoring results. “And it’s troubling that the main contractor, ERG, is monkeying with their analytical methods when this is such a profound problem.”

A spokesman for Sterigenic­s did not respond to a request for comment, but has said previously that detection levels of the gas in cities such as Chicago, Denver, and downtown Los Angeles have all been found to greatly exceed the level that EPA says is acceptable.

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