Cancer cluster confirmed in northeast Pennsylvania
Posted By ap 10 months, 1 week ago in Science & TechnologyHAZLETON, Pa. (AP) _ Nearly a year after federal epidemiologists first sounded the alarm over a cluster of rare blood cancers in northeastern Pennsylvania, their research has zeroed in on a hardscrabble region 80 miles northwest of Philadelphia that is home to several Superfund sites and a power plant fired by waste coal.
The U.S. Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry said Monday that it confirmed an elevated number of cases of polycythemia vera, or PV, in a 20-mile stretch between Hazleton and Tamaqua.
It remains the first and only cluster of PV ever recorded in the United States, though the condition became reportable to state cancer registries only in 2001, and officials said it's statistically likely there are others.
Residents in the affected area were four times as likely to suffer from PV as residents living in outlying areas, according to the government.
Researchers cautioned, though, that their investigation was not designed to uncover an environmental link to PV, a cancer that results in the overproduction of red blood cells and can lead to heart attack or stroke. PV's cause is unknown.
"We don't want to give the message that there are no connections," said researcher Vince Seaman. "We just don't have the data."
Some residents blame their illnesses on a recycler that accepted hundreds of thousands of gallons of paint sludge, waste oils, used solvents, PCBs, cyanide, pesticides and many other known or suspected carcinogens.
Environmental officials shut down the site in 1979, and it was later placed on the federal Superfund list and cleaned up. Other Superfund sites dot the area, too, along with a power plant that burns waste coal that some residents also suspect has caused health problems.
Researchers said they confirmed 33 cases of PV in Luzerne, Carbon and Schuylkill counties. That was a slightly lower number than they reported last October at the conclusion of their preliminary investigation into the cluster.
The agency revealed its latest findings at a community meeting in Hazleton on Monday night.
Researchers said they found that Pennsylvania does not accurately report the number of PV cases statewide. That's because the criteria for diagnosing the illness have changed and because PV is reported only by hospitals.
Seaman said inaccurate PV reporting is also likely a problem in other states.
U.S. Sen. Arlen Specter announced Monday that the Senate Appropriations Committee approved $262,000 for a planned Drexel University investigation into the cluster. The funding has yet to clear the full Senate.
"It is clear that more research is necessary to pinpoint the reasons for this cluster, including whether environmental contaminants are a factor," Specter said in a statement.
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On the Net:
Government's PV site: http://tinyurl.com/5wxxbu
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washingtondad6810 months, 1 week ago
If our government is officially calling this a cancer cluster the residents there must be suffering something terrible. Their insistance that Fallon, NV didn't have one bordered on criminal. Here's hoping they isolate the cause before more lives are needlessly cut short.
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miklkit10 months, 1 week ago
Uh oh. There are several Superfund sites and a coal fired power plant in the area.
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Dobes_Rule10 months, 1 week ago
The majority of my family members were born in Hazleton, PA....and this has been going on for quite a while - many, many unexplained (?) illnesses are coming out of that area. Luckily most of my family moved away from PA a long time ago, but we still have some family & many friends there - at least this is a start - FINALLY! Scary, really, that if they admit THIS - imagine what they're not saying.
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reviewer10 months, 1 week ago
I don't know why but this reminds me of Lyme disease and other cluster illnesses that the government ignored / subdued. Arlen Specter was one of the first to investigate LD too.
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