ABC Money
Home

Doctor sees blood cancers in WTC program


Published :
Fri, 01 Jun 2007 00:21
By : Agencies
Print this Story


AddThis Social Bookmark Button

NEW YORK (AP) - The head of the largest program tracking the health of World Trade Center site workers said several have developed rare blood cell cancers, raising fears that cancer will become a 'third wave' of illnesses among those exposed to toxic dust after Sept. 11.

Dr. Robin Herbert, co-director of the World Trade Center Medical Monitoring Program at Mount Sinai Medical Center, said researchers who have screened 20,000 of the estimated 40,000 ground zero workers are 'most concerned' about lymphatic and blood cancer cases.

'We are worried about a third wave, which is the possibility of cancer down the road,' Herbert said in an audiotaped interview posted on the New England Journal of Medicine's Web site.

'The kind of thing that worries us is that we know we have a handful of cases of multiple myeloma in very young individuals, and multiple myeloma is a condition that ... almost always presents later in life,' she added. 'That's the kind of odd, unusual and troubling finding that we are seeing already.'

Doctors had previously said it was too soon to know whether any cancers can be linked to trade center dust exposure, although Mount Sinai published research last year that said about 70 percent of the workers they screened had respiratory illnesses.

An article published Thursday with Herbert's interview in the New England Journal of Medicine said that while workers did inhale cancer-causing chemicals, 'an associated increased risk for respiratory tract cancer and most other types of cancer will not be apparent for decades.'

The researchers from Johns Hopkins University and the University of Rochester suggested tracking diseases for at least two decades through a New York City-based health registry that plans to monitor residents' and workers' health for 20 years.

Herbert, who was not available further comment Thursday, didn't say in her audiotaped interview how many blood cell cancer cases the Mount Sinai program was tracking. She said researchers are verifying all the cases that have been reported by members of the monitoring program.

An attorney representing thousands of workers and residents said that more than 100 of his clients have blood cell cancers. About eight have multiple myeloma, David Worby said. Most of his clients are in their 30s or 40s, and the youngest is 29, he said.

More than half of all cases of multiple myeloma, a plasma cell cancer that spreads throughout bone marrow, occur in people over 70, and about 1 percent of cases occur in people under 40, according to the Multiple Myeloma Research Foundation in Norwalk, Conn.

Herbert, referring to cancer as a possible third wave of disease, said the first was the chronic coughing and acute respiratory problems that workers got right after their post-Sept. 11 work.

Second, she said, are more serious chronic lung diseases such as sarcoidosis, which killed a New York woman who inhaled dust from the collapsing twin towers on Sept. 11, 2001. The city medical examiner last week added Felicia Dunn-Jones' 2002 death to the official list of Sept. 11 attack victims.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg said of Herbert's remarks on blood cell cancers: 'The city's own doctors don't -- they will not say there's no possibility -- but they don't at the moment see this as the great threat.'

Said Worby: 'It's not a great threat to the general public, but to people who are already sick and have these blood cell cancers and who gave up their lives ... it's a great threat to them because a lot of them are going to die.'

Associated Press writer Sara Kugler contributed to this report.

Copyright 2007 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.




Share on


 You Might Like
Seniors losing out on health benefits
Computers lead to false mammogram scares
+
Sanofi-Pasteur's Gardasil HPV vaccine treats lesions on vulva, vagina - Lancet
Sanofi Pasteur MSD applies to update marketing license for Gardasil

Comment on this Article
Comment:
Title:
Name:
Please Enter
 
Here
  

 Search News

 Look For
Business
Credit cards
Finance
Loans
Money
Mortgages

 
 Stock Quotes *
SYMBOL
LAST
CHANGE
DOW JONES
10340.69
-107.24 ( -1.03 %)
NASDAQ
2792.28
22.57 ( 0.81 %)
FTSE 100
5741.15
38.78 ( 0.68 %)

SYMBOL ( 2012-01-19 )
LAST
CHANGE
STANDARD CHARTERED ( 11:35am )
1559.00
70.00 ( 4.76 %)
WOLSELEY PLC ( 11:35am )
2250.00
70.00 ( 3.20 %)
CARNIVAL ( 11:35am )
2017.00
46.00 ( 2.42 %)
LAND SECURITIES GROUP ( 11:35am )
679.50
36.50 ( 5.63 %)
WHITBREAD ( 11:35am )
1662.99
33.99 ( 2.09 %)

SYMBOL ( 2012-01-19 )
LAST
CHANGE
3M COMPANY ( 12:34pm )
85.78
0.71 ( 0.83 %)
BOEING CO ( 12:34pm )
75.70
0.64 ( 0.85 %)
JP MORGAN CHASE CO ( 12:34pm )
37.03
0.49 ( 1.33 %)
WAL MART STORES ( 12:34pm )
60.44
0.43 ( 0.72 %)
IBM ( 12:34pm )
181.50
0.43 ( 0.24 %)

SYMBOL ( 2012-01-19 )
LAST
CHANGE
F5 NETWORKS INC ( 12:11pm )
122.38
13.92 ( 11.80 %)
ICO GLOBAL COMM CL A ( 8:01pm )
99999999.99
9.37 ( 366.02 %)
PRICELINECOM INC ( 12:23pm )
525.40
6.57 ( 1.26 %)
AMAZONCOM INC ( 12:04pm )
195.65
6.21 ( 3.25 %)
MILLICOM INTERNATIONAL CELLULAR SA ( 4:00pm )
110.18
4.82 ( 4.43 %)

Gainers & Losers
Dow Jones
Euro Stoxx 50
FTSE 100
FTSE 250
FTSE AIM
FTSE ALL
Nasdaq

 Portfolio Manager

You must log in to access this area of the site. If you are not a registered user click here to sign up for instant access!


 Finance Explained

Money making ideas

Save money

Money management
Savings accounts
Investing money
Share dealing
Stock broker
Forex currency trading
Pension plans
Functions of Money

(c) 2007 ABCmoney.co.uk, All Rights Reserved
*ABCMoney.co.uk does not guarantee the accuracy of any share prices or stock quotations displayed. These are not real time quotes; all are delayed by at least twenty minutes and are for information purposes only.