Abstract

Agriculture is a mainstay of many developing countries’ economy, such as Brazil. According to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Brazil is the major global consumer of pesticides. Irrespective of the fact that the International Agency for Research on Cancer suggests that pesticides promote human cancer risk, a prospective study reports that colorectal cancer (CRC) burden will increase in developing countries by approximately 60% in the coming decades. Here, we review the literature and public data from the Brazilian Federal Government to explore why pesticides levels and new cases of colon cancer (CC) are rising rapidly in the country. CC incidence is the second most common malignancy in men and women in the South and the Southeast of Brazil. However, while these regions have almost doubled their pesticide levels and CC mortality in 14 years, the amount of sold pesticides increased 5.2-fold with a corresponding 6.2-fold increase in CC mortality in Northern and Northeastern states. Interestingly, mortality from endocrine, nutritional, and metabolic diseases are rapidly increasing, in close resemblance with the pesticide detection levels in food. Taken together, we discuss the possibility that pesticides might alter the risk of CC.

Highlights

  • The International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) reported recently that several pesticides increase the risk of cancer in humans [1, 2]

  • While the Southern region more than doubled the amount of pesticides bought per year [from ~89 kg/km2 (2000) to ~221 kg/km2 (2014)], this increase was ~7-times higher in the Northern states [from ~0.64 kg/km2 (2000) to ~4.5 kg/km2 (2014)]

  • Together with several lines of scientific evidence that the cancer risk may be altered by decades of exposure to environmental factors [5, 6, 76], the IARC has emphasized the carcinogenic effects of pesticides for a few years [1, 2, 80,81,82]

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Summary

Frontiers in Public Health

Discussion on Rising Pesticide Levels and Colon Cancer Burden in Brazil. We review the literature and public data from the Brazilian Federal Government to explore why pesticides levels and new cases of colon cancer (CC) are rising rapidly in the country. CC incidence is the second most common malignancy in men and women in the South and the Southeast of Brazil. While these regions have almost doubled their pesticide levels and CC mortality in 14 years, the amount of sold pesticides increased 5.2-fold with a corresponding 6.2-fold increase in CC mortality in Northern and Northeastern states.

INTRODUCTION
POTENTIAL MECHANISMS OF HOW PESTICIDES ALTER THE CC AND CRC RISKS
SCIENTIFIC LIMITATIONS TO STUDY THE CARCINOGENIC EFFECTS OF PESTICIDES
Findings
CONCLUSION AND FUTURE PERSPECTIVES
COLLECTION OF PUBLIC DATA
Full Text
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