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Grant Details

Grant Number: 5U01CA259208-02 Interpret this number
Primary Investigator: Zhang, Xuehong
Organization: Brigham And Women'S Hospital
Project Title: Perfluoroalkyl Substances (PFASS) and Liver Cancer Risk in the United States
Fiscal Year: 2023


Abstract

Project Summary/Abstract Liver cancer is one of the most rapidly increasing cancers over the past decades in the United States. The causes for this long-term increase are unclear, but could stem from exposures to possibly carcinogenic environmental contaminants. One likely source is per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), a group of synthetic chemicals that are highly persistent and accumulate in human liver tissue. Emerging, converging evidence from laboratory animals and occupational mortality studies strongly support the role of PFAS in liver carcinogenesis. However, these studies are limited by small sample sizes, restriction to occupational exposure, and studying single types of PFAS. Hence, we propose the first comprehensive prospective pooled cohort study in non-occupational settings to examine real-world human exposure to PFAS (of multiple types and mixtures) in relation to liver cancer incidence. Our long-term goal is to identify novel risk factors for liver cancer to reduce liver cancer burden. Moreover, liver cancer incidence is higher in African Americans and Hispanics compared with whites, but the causes of these disparities remain unclear. Furthermore, more liver cancer cases in the United States are not caused by chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) and C virus (HCV) infections, but risk factors for non-viral liver cancer remain poorly understood. The objective of this proposal is to comprehensively assess the relationship between mixture exposure to PFAS and liver cancer risk overall, by racial/ethnic groups, and by HBV/HCV status. To do so, we propose this first comprehensive study to date of exposures to PFAS and liver cancer risk through a pooling project that leverages extensive resources from six well-characterized cohort studies. This pooling project includes a racially/ethnically diverse population followed for up to 32 years, along with pre-diagnosis plasma samples and validated covariate data. Our specific aims are to characterize the associations between plasma levels of PFAS and risk of developing liver cancer in this pooled nested case-control study with measured HBV/HCV status data (Aim 1); and assess the extent to which certain PFAS mixture patterns act synergistically to increase liver cancer risk (Aim 2). In exploratory aims, we will quantify the aforementioned associations by major liver cancer subtypes, and further estimate the associations between plasma PFAS levels and survival among patients with liver cancer. This proposal is innovative in addressing an important, yet understudied research area of PFAS and liver cancer through integrating cutting-edge technologies of PFAS assays and advanced methods of mixture analyses into longitudinal cohort studies. The contribution is significant because this research will generate new insights into the etiology of liver cancer, enable design of new prevention/intervention strategies and actions that reduce liver cancer morbidity and mortality and related disparities. These findings will also provide new information on health effects of PFAS for practitioners and regulatory agencies to make solid decisions, regulations, and action plans to improve public health.



Publications


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