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International Agency for Research on Cancer

The International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC; French: Centre International de Recherche sur le Cancer, CIRC) is an intergovernmental agency forming part of the World Health Organization of the United Nations. Its role is to conduct and coordinate research into the causes of cancer.[2] It also collects and publishes surveillance data regarding the occurrence of cancer worldwide.[3]

International Agency for Research on Cancer / Centre international de recherche sur le cancer
AbbreviationIARC, CIRC
Formation20 May 1965; 57 years ago (1965-05-20)[1]
TypeAgency
Legal statusActive
HeadquartersLyon, France
Head
Elisabete Weiderpass (director)
Parent organization
World Health Organization
Websitewww.iarc.who.int

Its IARC monographs programme identifies carcinogenic hazards and evaluates environmental causes of cancer in humans.[4][5]

IARC has its own governing council, and in 1965 the first members were the Federal Republic of Germany, France, Italy, the United Kingdom, and the United States of America.[2] Today, IARC's membership has grown to 27 countries.[6]

History

 
Exterior of the main building of the headquarters for the International Agency of Research on Cancer

In late February 1963, after he experienced his spouse suffering and dying of cancer, journalist and peace activist Yves Poggioli sent a letter to Emmanuel d'Astier de la Vignerie relating his story, and urging support for the creation of an international center to fight against cancer, whose funding where to be directly debited from the national budgets allocated to nuclear weaponry. Touched by the letter, d'Astier assembled a group of French prominent figures, among which Pierre Auger, Francis Perrin, Jean Hyppolite, François Perroux, Pierre Massé, Louis Armand, François Bloch-Lainé [fr], Jean Rostand, François Mauriac, Antoine Lacassagne [fr], Ambroise-Marie Carré and Le Corbusier, to reach for French president Charles de Gaulle[7] in national newspaper Le Monde on the 8 November 1963. de Gaulle answered positively to the call and reached for the World Health Organization director M. G. Candeau on the 11 November. The project rapidly gained momentum, and IARC was created on 20 May 1965, by a resolution of the World Health Assembly, as the specialized cancer agency of the World Health Organization.[2] The Agency's headquarters building was provided by its host in Lyon, France.[8]

The first IARC Director was John Higginson (1966–1981), who was followed by Lorenzo Tomatis (1982–1993), Paul Kleihues (1994–2003), Peter Boyle (2004–2008), Christopher Wild (2009–2018) and Elisabete Weiderpass (2019–present).

Monographs

In 1970, after IARC received numerous requests for lists of known and suspected human carcinogens, its advisory committee recommended that expert groups prepare a compendium on carcinogenic chemicals, which began publishing the IARC Monographs series with this aim in mind.[9][10]

IARC identifies carcinogenic hazard based on qualitative assessment of animal and human evidence.[11] The IARC Working Groups classify agents, mixtures and exposures into one of five categories. The categorization is a matter of scientific judgement that reflects the strength of evidence derived from studies in humans, experimental animals and other relevant data.[12] The classification is based only on the strength of evidence for carcinogenicity, not on the relative increase of cancer risk due to exposure, or on the amount of agent exposure necessary to cause cancer.[13]

  • Group 1: The agent is carcinogenic to humans.

There is sufficient evidence of carcinogenicity in humans. Exceptionally, an agent (or mixture) may be placed in this category if there is less than sufficient evidence in humans, but sufficient evidence in experimental animals and strong evidence in exposed humans that the agent acts through a relevant mechanism of carcinogenicity.[12] Examples of agents classified as Group 1 include tobacco smoke, alcoholic beverages, Chinese-style salted fish and consumption of processed meat.

  • Group 2A: The agent is probably carcinogenic to humans.

There is limited evidence of carcinogenicity in humans and sufficient evidence in experimental animals. Occasionally, an agent (or mixture) may be classified here when there is inadequate evidence in humans but sufficient evidence in experimental animals and strong evidence that the carcinogenesis is mediated by a mechanism that also operates in humans. Exceptionally, an agent (or mixture) may solely be classified under this category if there is limited evidence of carcinogenicity in humans, but if it clearly belongs to this category based on mechanistic considerations.[12] Examples of agents classified as Group 2A include emissions from high-temperature frying of food, the occupational exposures as a hairdresser or barber, consumption of red meat and night shift work .

  • Group 2B: The agent is possibly carcinogenic to humans.

There is limited evidence of carcinogenicity in humans and less than sufficient evidence in experimental animals. It may also be used if there is inadequate evidence in humans but sufficient evidence in experimental animals. Occasionally, an agent (or mixture) may be placed in group 2B if there is inadequate evidence in humans and less than sufficient evidence in experimental animals but there is supporting evidence of carcinogenicity from mechanistic and other relevant data. An agent or a mixture may also be classified in this category solely on the basis of strong evidence of carcinogenicity from mechanistic and other relevant data.[12] Examples of agents classified as Group 2B include occupational exposures in working in the textile manufacturing industry, printing processes, traditional Asian pickled vegetables, and radiofrequency electromagnetic fields.

  • Group 3: The agent is not classifiable as to its carcinogenicity to humans.

The evidence is inadequate in humans and inadequate or limited in experimental animals. Exceptionally, agents (or mixtures) where evidence is inadequate in humans but sufficient in experimental animals may be placed in this category only if there is strong evidence that the mechanism of carcinogenicity in experimental animals does not operate in humans.

Substances that do not fall into any other group are placed in this category. This is not a determination of non-carcinogenicity or overall safety. It means that further research is needed, especially when exposures are widespread or the cancer data are consistent with differing interpretations.[12]

As of August 2019, roughly 50% of all substances analyzed by IARC fall into this category.[14]

  • Group 4: The agent is probably not carcinogenic to humans.

There is evidence suggesting lack of carcinogenicity in humans and in experimental animals. In some instances, agents or mixtures for which there is inadequate evidence in humans but evidence suggesting lack of carcinogenicity in experimental animals, consistently and strongly supported by a broad range of mechanistic and other relevant data may be classified group 4.[12] Until recently, only caprolactam fell under this category, but it was recently upgraded. This currently leaves no agent or substance classiified as probably not carcinogenic to humans by the IARC.[15]

Controversies

Transparency (1998–2004)

Lorenzo Tomatis, IARC director from 1982 to 1993, was allegedly "barred from entering the building" in 2003 after "accusing the IARC of softpedaling the risks of industrial chemicals"[16] in a 2002 article.[17] In 2003 thirty public-health scientists signed a letter targeting conflicts of interest and the lack of transparency.[16] Tomatis accused the IARC of "highly irregular" voting procedures, alleging industrial interferences, and called for the agency to publish voting procedures and names in details for independent scrutiny.[16]

The IARC rejected these criticisms, highlighting that only 17 of 410 of the working-group participants were consultants to industry and these people never served as chairs, nor were allowed to vote.[16] The reason the details of the voting names were not published was to avoid political pressures on the participating Working Group scientists, and to protect the integrity of the deliberative process.[16]

Glyphosate monograph (2015–2018)

On 20 March 2015, IARC classified glyphosate, the most widely used weed killing substance in the world sold under the brand name of Roundup by Monsanto,[18] as "probably carcinogenic to humans" (Group 2A).[19][20]

Subsequently, many national regulatory authorities underwent a reevaluation of the risk posed by the exposure to glyphosate. Regulators in Europe (ECHA, EFSA), Canada, Japan and New Zealand reported that the glyphosate was unlikely to pose any carcinogenic risk to humans.[18] California put glyphosate on its list of unsafe chemicals.[21]

Since the publishing, IARC claimed it has suffered unprecedented large-scale attacks on its reputation from the agro-chemical industry.[22]

Industry reactions

The American Chemistry Council (ACC), the trade group for U.S. chemical companies, declared that IARC evaluates how hazardous a substance is based on whether the substance could "cause cancer in humans under any circumstances, including at exposure levels beyond what is typical."[23]

U.S. Congressional reactions

In early 2016, members of the scientific panel that reviewed glyphosate in 2015 were issued legal requests in the U.S. related to their work. In April 2016, internal IARC officials told its experts to not release documents or comply with the legal requests related to its review of glyphosate.[18]

In the fall of 2016, the U.S. House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform held a briefing to ask officials from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) about NIH's grant funding to the IARC.[23] The NIH grant database showed that it has given the IARC over $1.2 million in 2016. Jason Chaffetz (Republican) asked the NIH to give his committee details of its standards for awarding grants and vetting grant nominees.[24] Additionally, Congressman Robert Aderholt (Republican), chairman of the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Agriculture, wrote a letter in June 2016 to the head of the NIH questioning the funding of IARC.[24] Republican congressman Jason Chaffetz argued that the IARC is too prone to conclude that substances are carcinogenic.[citation needed] However, IARC respond that the Working Groups methods are "widely respected for their scientific rigor, standardized and transparent process and for freedom from conflicts of interest."[18][24] Director of IARC Chris Wild further added that the IARC only chooses substances to evaluate from which there already exists a body of scientific literature that says there is a carcinogenic risk to humans. Wild said that because IARC does not select substances at random, it has a low rate of determining a substance as not being cancer-causing.[23]

Criticism of monographs methodology

On 26 October 2015, a Working Group of 22 experts from 10 countries evaluated the carcinogenicity of the consumption of red meat and processed meat and classified the consumption of red meat as "probably carcinogenic to humans (Group 2A)", mainly related to colorectal cancer, and to pancreatic and prostate cancer. It also evaluated processed meat to be "carcinogenic to humans (Group 1)", due to "sufficient evidence in humans that the consumption of processed meat causes colorectal cancer".[25][26][27]

Marcel Kuntz, a French director of research at the French National Centre for Scientific Research, criticized the classification because it did not assess the risks associated with exposure (probability of getting a cancer from certain exposure): for example, red meat is qualified as probably carcinogenic, but the quantity of consumed red meat at which it could become dangerous is not specified.[28] Ed Yong, a British science journalist, criticized the agency and its "confusing" category system for misleading the public.[29] IARC answered in a press release their mission was not to evaluate potency or to assess the risks but only to determine scientifically the strength of carcinogenetic evidence of glyphosate.[30]

Some of the items that the IARC classifies, such as mobile phones (Group 2B) and processed meat (Group 1) have caused controversy.[18] The agency has also classified drinking very hot beverages – around 70 °C (158 °F) – as a probable carcinogen (Group 2A).[31]

Toxic tort law firms

In 2019 IARC was accused of cooperation with "toxic tort law firms" who make profit of suing companies for compensation for alleged health issues based on IARC classification. IARC was accused from hiding conflicts of interest impacting a few invited experts, especially those related to large-scale cash flows from US law firms.[32][33]

Members

The five founding states were the US, France, Italy, West Germany and the UK.

They were later joined by 21 other members, of which 3 left:

Countries Entry Exit
Date Resolution Date Resolution
Australia September 1965 GC/1/R1
USSR then Russia September 1965 GC/1/R2
Israel April 1966 GC/2/R1 October 1971 GC/9/R11
Netherlands April 1967 GC/3/R1
Belgium October 1970 GC/8/R10
Japan May 1972 GC/10/R1
Sweden May 1979 GC/18/R1
Canada January 1982 GC/22/R1
Finland April 1986 GC/27/R1
Norway April 1987 GC/28/R1
Denmark May 1990 GC/31/R1
Switzerland May 1990 GC/31/R2
Argentina May 1998 GC/39/R1 May 2001 GC/42/R3
Brazil May 1998 GC/39/R2 May 2001 GC/42/R4
Spain May 2003 GC/44/R1
India May 2006 GC/48/R1
South Korea May 2006 GC/48/R2
Ireland May 2007 GC/49/R2
Austria May 2008 GC/50/R18
Brazil May 2013 GC/55/17
Qatar May 2013 GC/55/19
Morocco May 2015 GC/57/19
China May 2021[6] GC/63/

See also

References

  1. ^ Resolution WHA18.44 of the World Health Assembly on 20 May 1965.
  2. ^ a b c Colditz, Graham A. (ed.) (2015). The SAGE Encyclopedia of Cancer and Society (International Agency for Research on Cancer). SAGE Publications. pp. 1323–. ISBN 978-1-5063-0126-6. {{cite book}}: |author= has generic name (help)
  3. ^ "CANCERMondial". www-dep.iarc.fr.
  4. ^ "IARC Monographs on the Evaluation of Carcinogenic Risks to Humans". monographs.iarc.fr.
  5. ^ Caballero, Benjamin et al. (eds.) (2015). Encyclopedia of Food and Health. Elsevier Science. p. 658. ISBN 978-0-12-384953-3. {{cite book}}: |author= has generic name (help)
  6. ^ a b "China joins the International Agency for Research on Cancer" (Press release). Lyon, France: International Agency for Research on Cancer. 17 May 2021. Retrieved 18 May 2021.
  7. ^ Sohier R., Sutherland A.G.B. (1990). , Rapport technique du CIRC no 6, p. 1–8
  8. ^ Payer, Lynn J. (24 November 1972). "IARC: An Environmental Approach to Cancer Research". Science. New Series. 178 (4063): 844–846. Bibcode:1972Sci...178..844P. doi:10.1126/science.178.4063.844. PMID 17754792.
  9. ^ http://monographs.iarc.fr/ENG/Preamble/CurrentPreamble.pdf IARC, Preamble
  10. ^ Obe, Günter; Marchant, Gary E.; Jandrig, Burkhard (2011). Cancer Risk Evaluation: Methods and Trends, Chapter 4: The IARC Monographs Programme. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-3-527-63463-7.
  11. ^ Klaassen, Curtis (2013). Casarett & Doull's Toxicology: The Basic Science of Poisons, Eighth Edition. McGraw Hill Professional. p. 91. ISBN 978-0-07-176922-8.
  12. ^ a b c d e f "Preamble" (PDF). IARC Monographs (January 2006 ed.). International Agency for Research on Cancer: 22–23. September 2015 [1991]. Retrieved 13 April 2018.
  13. ^ "Introduction". International Programme on Chemical Safety. January 1999. Retrieved 16 May 2010.
  14. ^ "IARC Monographs – Classifications". monographs.iarc.fr. Retrieved 26 August 2019.
  15. ^ (PDF). International Agency for Research on Cancer. July 2018 . Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 July 2018. Retrieved 9 January 2020. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  16. ^ a b c d e Ferber D (July 2003). "Carcinogens. Lashed by critics, WHO's cancer agency begins a new regime". Science. 301 (5629): 36–37. doi:10.1126/science.301.5629.36. PMID 12843372. S2CID 8034222.
  17. ^ Tomatis L (2002). "The IARC monographs program: changing attitudes towards public health". Int J Occup Environ Health. 8 (2): 144–152. doi:10.1179/107735202800338993. PMID 12019681. S2CID 46530047.
  18. ^ a b c d e Kelland, Kate (25 October 2016). "Exclusive: WHO cancer agency asked experts to withhold weedkiller documents". Reuters. London. Retrieved 28 November 2016.
  19. ^ "IARC Monographs Volume 112: evaluation of five organophosphate insecticides and herbicides" (PDF) (Press release). Lyon, France: International Agency for Research on Cancer. 20 March 2015. Retrieved 28 November 2016.
  20. ^ International Agency for Research on Cancer (2017). IARC Monographs, Volume 112. Glyphosate, in: Some Organophosphate Insecticides and Herbicides (PDF). Lyon: IARC/WHO. pp. 321–412.
  21. ^ "Glyphosate Listed Effective July 7, 2017, as Known to the State of California to Cause Cancer". oehha.ca.gov. Retrieved 9 August 2019.
  22. ^ "IARC response to criticisms of the Monographs and the glyphosate evaluation" (PDF). IARC (published 2 February 2018). January 2018. Retrieved 14 April 2018.
  23. ^ a b c Träger, Rebecca (21 October 2016). "Congress probes NIH backing of cancer agency". Chemistry World. The Royal Society of Chemistry (Great Britain). Retrieved 28 November 2016.
  24. ^ a b c Kelland, Kate (6 October 2016). "Exclusive: U.S. lawmakers to investigate funding of WHO cancer agency". Reuters. London. Retrieved 28 November 2016.
  25. ^ Staff (26 October 2015). "World Health Organization – IARC Monographs evaluate consumption of red meat and processed meat" (PDF). International Agency for Research on Cancer. Retrieved 26 October 2015.
  26. ^ Hauser, Christine (26 October 2015). "W.H.O. Report Links Some Cancers With Processed or Red Meat". The New York Times. Retrieved 26 October 2015.
  27. ^ Staff (26 October 2015). "Processed meats do cause cancer – WHO". BBC News. Retrieved 26 October 2015.
  28. ^ "Pourquoi les fausses sciences gouvernent le monde (et pourquoi il faut mettre un terme à ce règne)". Slate.fr (in French). Retrieved 7 November 2016.
  29. ^ Ed Yong (26 October 2015). "Why is the World Health Organization so bad at communicating cancer risk?". The Atlantic. Retrieved 26 October 2015.
  30. ^ "IARC response to criticisms of the Monographs and the glyphosate evaluation" (PDF). IARC (published 2 February 2018). January 2018. pp. 8–9. Retrieved 14 April 2018.
  31. ^ "IARC Monographs evaluate drinking coffee, maté, and very hot beverages" (PDF). IARC. 15 June 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  32. ^ "Predatort Part II: How predatory lawyers, activist scientists hijacked IARC – International Agency for Research on Cancer – for personal profit and ideological vanity". Genetic Literacy Project. 1 March 2019. Retrieved 11 May 2019.
  33. ^ "American Tort Lawyers and IARC: A Toxic Mutual Interest". EuropeanSeed. 12 April 2019. Retrieved 11 May 2019.

External links

  • Official website

Coordinates: 45°44′37″N 4°52′34″E / 45.7435°N 4.8761°E / 45.7435; 4.8761

international, agency, research, cancer, iarc, french, centre, international, recherche, cancer, circ, intergovernmental, agency, forming, part, world, health, organization, united, nations, role, conduct, coordinate, research, into, causes, cancer, also, coll. The International Agency for Research on Cancer IARC French Centre International de Recherche sur le Cancer CIRC is an intergovernmental agency forming part of the World Health Organization of the United Nations Its role is to conduct and coordinate research into the causes of cancer 2 It also collects and publishes surveillance data regarding the occurrence of cancer worldwide 3 International Agency for Research on Cancer Centre international de recherche sur le cancerAbbreviationIARC CIRCFormation20 May 1965 57 years ago 1965 05 20 1 TypeAgencyLegal statusActiveHeadquartersLyon FranceHeadElisabete Weiderpass director Parent organizationWorld Health OrganizationWebsitewww iarc who intIts IARC monographs programme identifies carcinogenic hazards and evaluates environmental causes of cancer in humans 4 5 IARC has its own governing council and in 1965 the first members were the Federal Republic of Germany France Italy the United Kingdom and the United States of America 2 Today IARC s membership has grown to 27 countries 6 Contents 1 History 2 Monographs 3 Controversies 3 1 Transparency 1998 2004 3 2 Glyphosate monograph 2015 2018 3 2 1 Industry reactions 3 2 2 U S Congressional reactions 3 2 3 Criticism of monographs methodology 3 2 4 Toxic tort law firms 4 Members 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory Edit Exterior of the main building of the headquarters for the International Agency of Research on Cancer In late February 1963 after he experienced his spouse suffering and dying of cancer journalist and peace activist Yves Poggioli sent a letter to Emmanuel d Astier de la Vignerie relating his story and urging support for the creation of an international center to fight against cancer whose funding where to be directly debited from the national budgets allocated to nuclear weaponry Touched by the letter d Astier assembled a group of French prominent figures among which Pierre Auger Francis Perrin Jean Hyppolite Francois Perroux Pierre Masse Louis Armand Francois Bloch Laine fr Jean Rostand Francois Mauriac Antoine Lacassagne fr Ambroise Marie Carre and Le Corbusier to reach for French president Charles de Gaulle 7 in national newspaper Le Monde on the 8 November 1963 de Gaulle answered positively to the call and reached for the World Health Organization director M G Candeau on the 11 November The project rapidly gained momentum and IARC was created on 20 May 1965 by a resolution of the World Health Assembly as the specialized cancer agency of the World Health Organization 2 The Agency s headquarters building was provided by its host in Lyon France 8 The first IARC Director was John Higginson 1966 1981 who was followed by Lorenzo Tomatis 1982 1993 Paul Kleihues 1994 2003 Peter Boyle 2004 2008 Christopher Wild 2009 2018 and Elisabete Weiderpass 2019 present Monographs EditIn 1970 after IARC received numerous requests for lists of known and suspected human carcinogens its advisory committee recommended that expert groups prepare a compendium on carcinogenic chemicals which began publishing the IARC Monographs series with this aim in mind 9 10 IARC identifies carcinogenic hazard based on qualitative assessment of animal and human evidence 11 The IARC Working Groups classify agents mixtures and exposures into one of five categories The categorization is a matter of scientific judgement that reflects the strength of evidence derived from studies in humans experimental animals and other relevant data 12 The classification is based only on the strength of evidence for carcinogenicity not on the relative increase of cancer risk due to exposure or on the amount of agent exposure necessary to cause cancer 13 Group 1 The agent is carcinogenic to humans There is sufficient evidence of carcinogenicity in humans Exceptionally an agent or mixture may be placed in this category if there is less than sufficient evidence in humans but sufficient evidence in experimental animals and strong evidence in exposed humans that the agent acts through a relevant mechanism of carcinogenicity 12 Examples of agents classified as Group 1 include tobacco smoke alcoholic beverages Chinese style salted fish and consumption of processed meat Group 2A The agent is probably carcinogenic to humans There is limited evidence of carcinogenicity in humans and sufficient evidence in experimental animals Occasionally an agent or mixture may be classified here when there is inadequate evidence in humans but sufficient evidence in experimental animals and strong evidence that the carcinogenesis is mediated by a mechanism that also operates in humans Exceptionally an agent or mixture may solely be classified under this category if there is limited evidence of carcinogenicity in humans but if it clearly belongs to this category based on mechanistic considerations 12 Examples of agents classified as Group 2A include emissions from high temperature frying of food the occupational exposures as a hairdresser or barber consumption of red meat and night shift work Group 2B The agent is possibly carcinogenic to humans There is limited evidence of carcinogenicity in humans and less than sufficient evidence in experimental animals It may also be used if there is inadequate evidence in humans but sufficient evidence in experimental animals Occasionally an agent or mixture may be placed in group 2B if there is inadequate evidence in humans and less than sufficient evidence in experimental animals but there is supporting evidence of carcinogenicity from mechanistic and other relevant data An agent or a mixture may also be classified in this category solely on the basis of strong evidence of carcinogenicity from mechanistic and other relevant data 12 Examples of agents classified as Group 2B include occupational exposures in working in the textile manufacturing industry printing processes traditional Asian pickled vegetables and radiofrequency electromagnetic fields Group 3 The agent is not classifiable as to its carcinogenicity to humans The evidence is inadequate in humans and inadequate or limited in experimental animals Exceptionally agents or mixtures where evidence is inadequate in humans but sufficient in experimental animals may be placed in this category only if there is strong evidence that the mechanism of carcinogenicity in experimental animals does not operate in humans Substances that do not fall into any other group are placed in this category This is not a determination of non carcinogenicity or overall safety It means that further research is needed especially when exposures are widespread or the cancer data are consistent with differing interpretations 12 As of August 2019 roughly 50 of all substances analyzed by IARC fall into this category 14 Group 4 The agent is probably not carcinogenic to humans There is evidence suggesting lack of carcinogenicity in humans and in experimental animals In some instances agents or mixtures for which there is inadequate evidence in humans but evidence suggesting lack of carcinogenicity in experimental animals consistently and strongly supported by a broad range of mechanistic and other relevant data may be classified group 4 12 Until recently only caprolactam fell under this category but it was recently upgraded This currently leaves no agent or substance classiified as probably not carcinogenic to humans by the IARC 15 Controversies EditTransparency 1998 2004 Edit Lorenzo Tomatis IARC director from 1982 to 1993 was allegedly barred from entering the building in 2003 after accusing the IARC of softpedaling the risks of industrial chemicals 16 in a 2002 article 17 In 2003 thirty public health scientists signed a letter targeting conflicts of interest and the lack of transparency 16 Tomatis accused the IARC of highly irregular voting procedures alleging industrial interferences and called for the agency to publish voting procedures and names in details for independent scrutiny 16 The IARC rejected these criticisms highlighting that only 17 of 410 of the working group participants were consultants to industry and these people never served as chairs nor were allowed to vote 16 The reason the details of the voting names were not published was to avoid political pressures on the participating Working Group scientists and to protect the integrity of the deliberative process 16 Glyphosate monograph 2015 2018 Edit On 20 March 2015 IARC classified glyphosate the most widely used weed killing substance in the world sold under the brand name of Roundup by Monsanto 18 as probably carcinogenic to humans Group 2A 19 20 Subsequently many national regulatory authorities underwent a reevaluation of the risk posed by the exposure to glyphosate Regulators in Europe ECHA EFSA Canada Japan and New Zealand reported that the glyphosate was unlikely to pose any carcinogenic risk to humans 18 California put glyphosate on its list of unsafe chemicals 21 Since the publishing IARC claimed it has suffered unprecedented large scale attacks on its reputation from the agro chemical industry 22 Industry reactions Edit The American Chemistry Council ACC the trade group for U S chemical companies declared that IARC evaluates how hazardous a substance is based on whether the substance could cause cancer in humans under any circumstances including at exposure levels beyond what is typical 23 U S Congressional reactions Edit In early 2016 members of the scientific panel that reviewed glyphosate in 2015 were issued legal requests in the U S related to their work In April 2016 internal IARC officials told its experts to not release documents or comply with the legal requests related to its review of glyphosate 18 In the fall of 2016 the U S House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform held a briefing to ask officials from the National Institutes of Health NIH about NIH s grant funding to the IARC 23 The NIH grant database showed that it has given the IARC over 1 2 million in 2016 Jason Chaffetz Republican asked the NIH to give his committee details of its standards for awarding grants and vetting grant nominees 24 Additionally Congressman Robert Aderholt Republican chairman of the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Agriculture wrote a letter in June 2016 to the head of the NIH questioning the funding of IARC 24 Republican congressman Jason Chaffetz argued that the IARC is too prone to conclude that substances are carcinogenic citation needed However IARC respond that the Working Groups methods are widely respected for their scientific rigor standardized and transparent process and for freedom from conflicts of interest 18 24 Director of IARC Chris Wild further added that the IARC only chooses substances to evaluate from which there already exists a body of scientific literature that says there is a carcinogenic risk to humans Wild said that because IARC does not select substances at random it has a low rate of determining a substance as not being cancer causing 23 Criticism of monographs methodology Edit On 26 October 2015 a Working Group of 22 experts from 10 countries evaluated the carcinogenicity of the consumption of red meat and processed meat and classified the consumption of red meat as probably carcinogenic to humans Group 2A mainly related to colorectal cancer and to pancreatic and prostate cancer It also evaluated processed meat to be carcinogenic to humans Group 1 due to sufficient evidence in humans that the consumption of processed meat causes colorectal cancer 25 26 27 Marcel Kuntz a French director of research at the French National Centre for Scientific Research criticized the classification because it did not assess the risks associated with exposure probability of getting a cancer from certain exposure for example red meat is qualified as probably carcinogenic but the quantity of consumed red meat at which it could become dangerous is not specified 28 Ed Yong a British science journalist criticized the agency and its confusing category system for misleading the public 29 IARC answered in a press release their mission was not to evaluate potency or to assess the risks but only to determine scientifically the strength of carcinogenetic evidence of glyphosate 30 Some of the items that the IARC classifies such as mobile phones Group 2B and processed meat Group 1 have caused controversy 18 The agency has also classified drinking very hot beverages around 70 C 158 F as a probable carcinogen Group 2A 31 Toxic tort law firms Edit In 2019 IARC was accused of cooperation with toxic tort law firms who make profit of suing companies for compensation for alleged health issues based on IARC classification IARC was accused from hiding conflicts of interest impacting a few invited experts especially those related to large scale cash flows from US law firms 32 33 Members EditThe five founding states were the US France Italy West Germany and the UK They were later joined by 21 other members of which 3 left Countries Entry ExitDate Resolution Date ResolutionAustralia September 1965 GC 1 R1USSR then Russia September 1965 GC 1 R2Israel April 1966 GC 2 R1 October 1971 GC 9 R11Netherlands April 1967 GC 3 R1Belgium October 1970 GC 8 R10Japan May 1972 GC 10 R1Sweden May 1979 GC 18 R1Canada January 1982 GC 22 R1Finland April 1986 GC 27 R1Norway April 1987 GC 28 R1Denmark May 1990 GC 31 R1Switzerland May 1990 GC 31 R2Argentina May 1998 GC 39 R1 May 2001 GC 42 R3Brazil May 1998 GC 39 R2 May 2001 GC 42 R4Spain May 2003 GC 44 R1India May 2006 GC 48 R1South Korea May 2006 GC 48 R2Ireland May 2007 GC 49 R2Austria May 2008 GC 50 R18Brazil May 2013 GC 55 17Qatar May 2013 GC 55 19Morocco May 2015 GC 57 19China May 2021 6 GC 63 See also Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to International Agency for Research on Cancer Air pollution European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer EORTC Genotoxic Mutagen National Cancer Institute US ToxicologyReferences Edit Resolution WHA18 44 of the World Health Assembly on 20 May 1965 a b c Colditz Graham A ed 2015 The SAGE Encyclopedia of Cancer and Society International Agency for Research on Cancer SAGE Publications pp 1323 ISBN 978 1 5063 0126 6 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a author has generic name help CANCERMondial www dep iarc fr IARC Monographs on the Evaluation of Carcinogenic Risks to Humans monographs iarc fr Caballero Benjamin et al eds 2015 Encyclopedia of Food and Health Elsevier Science p 658 ISBN 978 0 12 384953 3 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a author has generic name help a b China joins the International Agency for Research on Cancer Press release Lyon France International Agency for Research on Cancer 17 May 2021 Retrieved 18 May 2021 Sohier R Sutherland A G B 1990 La genese du CIRC IARC Rapport technique du CIRC no 6 p 1 8 Payer Lynn J 24 November 1972 IARC An Environmental Approach to Cancer Research Science New Series 178 4063 844 846 Bibcode 1972Sci 178 844P doi 10 1126 science 178 4063 844 PMID 17754792 http monographs iarc fr ENG Preamble CurrentPreamble pdf IARC Preamble Obe Gunter Marchant Gary E Jandrig Burkhard 2011 Cancer Risk Evaluation Methods and Trends Chapter 4 The IARC Monographs Programme John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 3 527 63463 7 Klaassen Curtis 2013 Casarett amp Doull s Toxicology The Basic Science of Poisons Eighth Edition McGraw Hill Professional p 91 ISBN 978 0 07 176922 8 a b c d e f Preamble PDF IARC Monographs January 2006 ed International Agency for Research on Cancer 22 23 September 2015 1991 Retrieved 13 April 2018 Introduction International Programme on Chemical Safety January 1999 Retrieved 16 May 2010 IARC Monographs Classifications monographs iarc fr Retrieved 26 August 2019 PDF International Agency for Research on Cancer July 2018 https web archive org web 20180718234153 https monographs iarc fr wp content uploads 2018 07 List of Classifications pdf Archived from the original PDF on 18 July 2018 Retrieved 9 January 2020 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help a b c d e Ferber D July 2003 Carcinogens Lashed by critics WHO s cancer agency begins a new regime Science 301 5629 36 37 doi 10 1126 science 301 5629 36 PMID 12843372 S2CID 8034222 Tomatis L 2002 The IARC monographs program changing attitudes towards public health Int J Occup Environ Health 8 2 144 152 doi 10 1179 107735202800338993 PMID 12019681 S2CID 46530047 a b c d e Kelland Kate 25 October 2016 Exclusive WHO cancer agency asked experts to withhold weedkiller documents Reuters London Retrieved 28 November 2016 IARC Monographs Volume 112 evaluation of five organophosphate insecticides and herbicides PDF Press release Lyon France International Agency for Research on Cancer 20 March 2015 Retrieved 28 November 2016 International Agency for Research on Cancer 2017 IARC Monographs Volume 112 Glyphosate in Some Organophosphate Insecticides and Herbicides PDF Lyon IARC WHO pp 321 412 Glyphosate Listed Effective July 7 2017 as Known to the State of California to Cause Cancer oehha ca gov Retrieved 9 August 2019 IARC response to criticisms of the Monographs and the glyphosate evaluation PDF IARC published 2 February 2018 January 2018 Retrieved 14 April 2018 a b c Trager Rebecca 21 October 2016 Congress probes NIH backing of cancer agency Chemistry World The Royal Society of Chemistry Great Britain Retrieved 28 November 2016 a b c Kelland Kate 6 October 2016 Exclusive U S lawmakers to investigate funding of WHO cancer agency Reuters London Retrieved 28 November 2016 Staff 26 October 2015 World Health Organization IARC Monographs evaluate consumption of red meat and processed meat PDF International Agency for Research on Cancer Retrieved 26 October 2015 Hauser Christine 26 October 2015 W H O Report Links Some Cancers With Processed or Red Meat The New York Times Retrieved 26 October 2015 Staff 26 October 2015 Processed meats do cause cancer WHO BBC News Retrieved 26 October 2015 Pourquoi les fausses sciences gouvernent le monde et pourquoi il faut mettre un terme a ce regne Slate fr in French Retrieved 7 November 2016 Ed Yong 26 October 2015 Why is the World Health Organization so bad at communicating cancer risk The Atlantic Retrieved 26 October 2015 IARC response to criticisms of the Monographs and the glyphosate evaluation PDF IARC published 2 February 2018 January 2018 pp 8 9 Retrieved 14 April 2018 IARC Monographs evaluate drinking coffee mate and very hot beverages PDF IARC 15 June 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Predatort Part II How predatory lawyers activist scientists hijacked IARC International Agency for Research on Cancer for personal profit and ideological vanity Genetic Literacy Project 1 March 2019 Retrieved 11 May 2019 American Tort Lawyers and IARC A Toxic Mutual Interest EuropeanSeed 12 April 2019 Retrieved 11 May 2019 External links EditOfficial website Portals Medicine Politics Coordinates 45 44 37 N 4 52 34 E 45 7435 N 4 8761 E 45 7435 4 8761 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title International Agency for Research on Cancer amp oldid 1134796937, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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