Female firefighters face elevated breast cancer risks due to toxic exposures
· News-MedicalRuthann Rudel, study-co-author, director of research at Silent Spring InstituteWith more and more women entering the profession, it's important to understand the impact of workplace exposures on their health so that we can inform policies to reduce exposures and create a safer work environment."
Rudel and her colleagues searched through databases from the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) and the U.S. National Toxicology Program to identify chemicals that cause mammary tumors in animals, because these chemicals are likely to increase breast cancer risk. In addition, the team searched for chemicals that have been associated with breast cancer in human studies.
The researchers then identified more than a hundred studies that describe the different chemicals firefighters encounter on the job and screened these studies to see which of these workplace exposures also raise the risk of breast cancer.
The analysis revealed 12 chemicals or classes of chemicals that firefighters are highly exposed to on the job and are associated with breast cancer risk. The chemicals include benzene, PAHs, acetaldehyde, styrene, dioxins, flame retardants, PFAS, and PCBs among others.
Firefighters can be exposed to an array of toxic chemicals when putting out fires-;building fires, wildfires, and vehicle fires. They also encounter harmful substances in their protective gear, fire station air and dust, and diesel exhaust from firefighter trucks.
Manufacturers add PFAS to firefighter turnout gear and firefighting foams. "But we don't know where the flame retardants are coming from-;they could be coming from the gear or another source," says Rudel. "If it turns out the chemicals are being added to turnout gear, that would be important to know so that they can be replaced with safer alternatives."
Similarly, diesel exhaust from fire trucks contains PAHs, so switching to electric trucks would help lower exposures as well, she says. "It's important to look at all the equipment and materials that firefighters routinely use."
Understanding the risks women face on the job can not only help change policies to improve worker safety, but also it could help ensure female workers receive the medical care and other benefits they need should they develop breast cancer.
"That means there are a lot of places in the country where female firefighters are not protected," says Rudel. "Hopefully, the findings from our study will change that."
Funding for this work came from the California Breast Cancer Research Program Grants #19UB-2900 and # 23BB-1700 and Silent Spring Institute's Safer Chemicals Program, which is funded by charitable gifts.
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