U.S. Will Use Once-Banned Human Tests
Pesticides: EPA says it will accept industry data
gathered by giving paid subjects chemical doses.
By ELIZABETH SHOGREN, Times Staff Writer
WASHINGTON -- Three years ago, in response to mounting
criticism from environmentalists and physicians, the
Clinton administration stopped using information from
industry studies conducted on humans to determine the
amount of pesticides that could be applied to fruits,
vegetables and other crops.
Now the Bush administration, siding with manufacturers on
whether such studies are ethical and scientifically valid,
has told the pesticide industry it will use data from such
tests, in which paid volunteers swallow small doses of the products.
The new policy, which the Environmental Protection Agency
has not announced, also appears to disregard the
recommendations of a scientific panel the agency assembled
in late 1998.
Two panel members called for a ban on human testing of
pesticides, while the 16 others said such tests must be
very limited. The panel of doctors, bioethicists and
clinical scientists urged the EPA to adopt a clear policy
on human testing, one that would require adherence to
rigorous standards and pre-approval by an independent
review board.
"The force of the report was, in general, that it
shouldn't be done. There should be a very high threshold,"
said panel member Samuel Gorovitz, a professor of
philosophy and public administration at Syracuse University.
The new policy could have a significant impact because it
comes as the government is beginning to reassess about
9,000 pesticide safety levels to reflect their impact on
children. In general, children can tolerate smaller
amounts of pesticides, medicines and other substances than
adults.
Federal regulators determine the amount of certain
pesticides that people can tolerate on foods, in water and
in agricultural jobs without harming their health. Too
much exposure can result in neurological damage, cancer or
other serious illnesses.
Though details of the new policy are unclear, industry
officials welcome the shift. Without human tests, the
government uses the results of animal testing and
multiplies that exposure level by 10 to establish an
exposure level considered safe for humans. The companies
argue that human tests provide more accurate results,
allowing pesticides to be applied to crops in larger
quantities and closer to delivery to supermarkets.
Industry Calls for Human Tests
Without human tests, regulations "end up being more
conservative and more restrictive than they need to be,"
said Ray McAllister, vice president for science and
regulatory affairs for the pesticide trade association.
If human subjects are not used, "you may be denying
benefits not only to the grower producing the crop but
also to society that needs the food at a reasonable
price," he said. "There are secondary public health
consequences if you don't have good crop protection."
Industry officials also noted that human volunteers are
regularly used to test the effects of air pollution.
The administration first signaled the policy switch last
month, when a top EPA official told the annual meeting of
the American Crop Protection Assn. that the agency would
consider the results of clinical tests on humans.
Assistant Administrator Stephen L. Johnson "indicated the
agency would be looking at the human data that were
submitted," McAllister said.
Also, documents on at least three pesticides submitted to
the EPA in recent weeks for re-registration plainly state
that the agency is considering data from tests on humans.
The re-registration is mandated by the 1996 Food Quality
Protection Act, which requires the EPA to reassess 9,000
currently registered pesticides for their impact on children.
An EPA official, speaking on the condition of anonymity,
confirmed Johnson's remarks to the trade group, and other
EPA officials acknowledged that the administration is
developing a new policy on human testing of pesticides.
But officials said they did not have approval from top
political appointees to talk about it.
In its 10-month tenure, the Bush administration has
weakened an array of Clinton administration environmental
regulations and proposals, agreeing with industry and
angering environmentalists. The rollbacks range from
loosening energy efficiency standards for air conditioners
to erasing a provision that would have allowed federal
land managers to reject certain types of mines if they
would cause irreparable damage to public land.
The administration also halted the implementation of new,
stricter standards for arsenic in drinking water. After
conducting its own tests, and under pressure from
Congress, the EPA announced last month that it would adopt
the Clinton administration standard.
In the decade before 1996, when the law requiring
retesting of pesticides was passed, the EPA received only
a handful of human tests. In the three years that
followed, the agency received 14 new, unsolicited human
subject studies on 10 pesticides.
The controversy over human testing of pesticides erupted
in 1998, when Environmental Working Group, a
Washington-based investigative environmental organization,
published a report on the plethora of human test results
arriving at the EPA for pesticide evaluations.
Then-EPA Administrator Carol Browner harshly criticized
the practice, launched the study and temporarily halted
the use of such data. The moratorium deterred companies
from sponsoring and submitting results from such tests.
But because the Clinton administration never formalized
the policy, Bush administration regulators could change
their practices without a new formal policy.
The majority of human studies considered by the EPA in the
past were conducted in other countries. But in 1999, 60
volunteers in Nebraska participated in a test of a
pesticide called chlorpyrifos, which is marketed as
Lorsban or Dursban. It has been used for 30 years to keep
insects off most major crops grown in the United States.
The volunteers were paid $460. Some of them swallowed
chlorpyrifos-laced tablets, while others took placebos.
Some members of both groups experienced headaches or
vomiting. Garry Hamlin, spokesman for chlorpyrifos
manufacturer Dow AgroSciences, said the results of his
company's tests showed no signs of toxicity from the pesticide.
"The clinical test was a way of bridging the gap from a
considerable amount of existing data that would help us
understand how this product functioned in the human body,
how the body metabolized it and how quickly it excreted
it," he said.
But the EPA panel of scientists found that human testing
is almost never needed for pesticides already in use
because studies are already available of agriculture
workers and fruit and vegetable eaters who have been
exposed to the pesticides.
The panel suggested that at least some human subject tests
used by the EPA in the past had not met the demands of
good science, saying that "bad science is always
unethical." Panel members were concerned, for example,
that previous human tests were too small to assess the
risks of pesticide exposure to the broader population or
to more vulnerable individuals.
Human testing of pesticides cannot be justified "to
facilitate the interests of industry or of agriculture,"
the panel concluded in its final report, delivered in
February 2000. Such studies are acceptable only if they
"promise reasonable health benefits to the individual or
society at large," it said.
Concerns About Tests' Prevalence
Human studies could be appropriate for new pesticides, the
panel concluded, if there was no way to protect human
health by testing on rats, dogs and other laboratory animals.
Panel members were concerned that human testing of
pesticides could become widespread, especially because the
1996 law required the EPA to give closer scrutiny to
pesticides originally registered before 1984.
Recent documents regarding the pesticides phosmet,
azinphos-methyl and chlorpyrifos--insecticides used on a
wide variety of fruits and vegetables--show that the EPA
is evaluating data from human tests as well as a variety
of tests on laboratory animals to determine exposure levels.
Pesticide manufacturers want to use human tests to reduce
or eliminate regulators' current assessment method:
determining safe exposure levels for laboratory animals
and then multiplying that risk factor by 10 to ensure
safety for humans.
In the midst of the dispute over federal policy,
California's Department of Pesticide Regulation drafted
its own policy on human testing. The state agency
considers human test data if the tests were conducted
under specific ethical and scientific guidelines.
The state agency has considered two or three human-subject
tests over the last five years, according to Glenn Brank,
spokesman for California's Department of Pesticide
Regulation. One such test, for the azinphos-methyl,
persuaded regulators that humans and animals respond in
the same way to the toxins in the pesticide.
As a result, the agency allowed growers of apricots and
other pitted fruits to apply the pesticide closer to
harvest time, Brank said.
Lynn Goldman, who headed the pesticide program at EPA for
five years during the Clinton administration, opposes the
use of human subject tests and strongly believes that EPA
can safely regulate pesticides with tests on animals.
She said she is "very troubled" by the use of human
testing for pesticides, because there is no possible
healthful effect from taking a pesticide-laced tablet, as
there usually is for testing a pharmaceutical. The only
justification for conducting the tests is to make more
money for the pharmaceutical companies, she said.
"If they were doing something to benefit us you might look
at it differently," said Goldman, now a professor of
environmental sciences at Johns Hopkins University. "For
industry, there is an enormous amount of money in the
balance; one study could make the difference of tens of
millions of dollars. That's one of the troubling ethical issues."
Goldman also finds it disturbing that test subjects are
given money to take the pesticide tablets, saying that
encourages students and low-income individuals to
participate.
Goldman said she believed that pressure from the industry
prevented the Clinton administration from finalizing a
policy governing human testing.
"When it came to new regulations or new policies like this
one--and especially around the Food Quality Protection Act
that had such a major impact on the world--we had a whole
lot of push-back through the White House from industry,
and a lot of it would come at us from Congress," she said.

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Dave Robison

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