Environmental radon, fracking wells, and lymphoma in dogs

Author:

Tindle Ashleigh N.1,Braman Samantha L.1,Swafford Brenna M.2,Trepanier Lauren A.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medical Sciences University of Wisconsin‐Madison Madison Wisconsin USA

2. Morris Animal Foundation Denver Colorado USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundMulticentric lymphoma (ML) in dogs resembles non‐Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) in humans. Human NHL is associated with multiple environmental exposures, including to radon and volatile organic compounds (VOCs).Hypothesis/ObjectivesThe objective of this study was to determine whether ML in dogs was associated with environmental radon or proximity to horizontal oil and drilling (fracking), a source of VOC pollution.MethodsWe identified dogs from the Golden Retriever Lifetime Study that developed ML (n = 52) along with matched controls (n = 104). Dog home addresses were categorized by Environmental Protection Agency radon zone and average residential radon by county, as well as by distance from fracking and associated wastewater wells.ResultsWe found no significant differences in county level radon measurements. Individual household radon measurements were not available. There was no difference in residential proximity to active fracking wells between dogs with ML and unaffected dogs. While dogs with ML lived closer to wastewater wells (123 vs 206 km; P = .01), there was no difference in the percentage of cases vs controls that lived in close proximity (20 km) to a fracking well (11.5% for cases, 6.7% for controls; OR 1.81, 95% CI 0.55 to 5.22; P = .36), or a wastewater well (6.7% for cases, 4.4% for controls; P > .99).Conclusions and Clinical ImportanceThese data suggest that more proximate sources of chemical exposures need to be assessed in dogs with ML, including measurements of individual household radon and household VOC concentrations.

Funder

Morris Animal Foundation

National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences

Publisher

Wiley

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