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Veterans and Agent Orange: Update 2012 (2014)

Chapter: 7 Immune-System Disorders

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Suggested Citation:"7 Immune-System Disorders." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Veterans and Agent Orange: Update 2012. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18395.
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7


Immune-System Disorders

As in Veterans and Agent Orange: Update 2010 (IOM, 2012, hereafter referred to as Update 2010), immune-system disorders are being addressed in a separate chapter preceding those on other adverse health outcomes. In Veterans and Agent Orange (VAO) reports prior to Update 2010—Veterans and Agent Orange: Health Effects of Herbicides Used in Vietnam, hereafter referred to as VAO (IOM, 1994), Veterans and Agent Orange: Update 1996 (IOM, 1996), Update 1998 (IOM, 1999), Update 2000 (IOM, 2001), Update 2002 (IOM, 2003), Update 2004 (IOM, 2005), Update 2006 (IOM, 2007), and Update 2008 (IOM, 2009)—possible adverse health outcomes arising from disruptions of the immune system were included in the “Other Health Effects” chapter. The current committee elected to revisit comprehensively the limited epidemiologic evidence concerning association of immune disease with herbicide exposure in light of the substantial volume of toxicologic evidence of 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD) impairment of the immune systems of laboratory animals.

This chapter opens with an overview of the various types of health problems that can arise from malfunctioning of the human immune system. The standard VAO sections leading to the committee’s assignment of a health outcome to a category of association follow, and they include a new tabulation of all the immune-related epidemiologic information that has been considered in this series and a synopsis of the information new in this update. The next section discusses factors that may lead the immune responses of animals exposed to the chemicals of interest (COIs) to be much more pronounced than any observed to date in humans. The chapter closes with the committee’s thoughts regarding research on the possibility that immune perturbations in humans function as a mechanistic step in the development of disease processes in other organ systems.

Suggested Citation:"7 Immune-System Disorders." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Veterans and Agent Orange: Update 2012. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18395.
×

The immune system plays three important roles in the body:

1.   It defends the body against infection by viruses, bacteria, and other disease-producing microorganisms, known as pathogens.

2.   It defends against cancer by destroying mutated cells that might otherwise develop into tumors and by providing immunity against tumors.

3.   It provides resident immune cells that are specially adapted for different tissues and organs (such as microglia in the central nervous system and Kupffer cells in the liver) that help to regulate the functional activity and integrity of those tissues.

To recognize the wide array of pathogens in the environment, the immune system relies on many cell types that operate together to generate immune responses. Those cells arise from stem cells in the bone marrow; they are found in lymphoid tissues throughout the body; and they circulate in the blood as white blood cells (WBCs). The main types of WBCs are granulocytes, monocytes, and lymphocytes. Each type has many specialized cell populations that are responsible for specific functions connected to the production of specific mediators, such as immune hormones, cytokines, and other secreted factors. Imbalances in those specialized populations or in their level of functional activity can result in inadequate or improper immune responses, which may lead to pathologic outcomes. Diseases arising from immune dysfunction may be apparent immediately or observed only after an organism encounters an environmental challenge that causes immune cells to respond (such as an infection).

CATEGORIES OF IMMUNE DYSFUNCTION

Immune dysfunctions are in four major categories that need not be mutually exclusive: immune suppression, allergy, autoimmunity, and inflammatory dysfunction (inappropriate or misdirected inflammation). Although immune suppression usually is seen as an increased incidence of infections or an increased risk of cancer, allergic, autoimmune, and inflammatory disorders can be manifested as diseases that affect virtually any tissue. It is often difficult to diagnose such diseases, so they may or may not be medically categorized as immune disorders.

Immune Suppression

Suppression of immune responses can reduce resistance to infectious disease and increase the risk of cancer. Infection with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) is a well-recognized example of an acquired immune deficiency in which a specific type of lymphocyte (CD4+ T cell) is the target of the virus. The decline in the number of CD4+ T cells after HIV infection correlates with an increased incidence of infectious diseases, including fatal opportunistic infections, and with

Suggested Citation:"7 Immune-System Disorders." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Veterans and Agent Orange: Update 2012. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18395.
×

an increased incidence of several types of cancer. Treatment of cancer patients with toxic chemotherapeutic drugs suppresses the immune system by inhibiting the generation of new WBCs by the bone marrow and by blocking proliferation of lymphocytes during an immune response. Both those examples represent severe immune suppression in which the adverse outcome is easily detected with clinical measurements.

Immune suppression can also result from exposure to chemicals in the workplace or in the environment and be manifested as recurrent infections, opportunistic infections, a higher incidence of a specific category of infections, or a higher incidence of cancer. However, unless the immune suppression is severe, it is often difficult to obtain clinical evidence that directly links chemically induced changes in immune function to increased infectious disease or cancer because many confounding factors can influence a person’s ability to combat infection. Such confounders include age, vaccination status, the virulence of the pathogen, the presence of other diseases (such as diabetes), stress, smoking, and the use of drugs or alcohol. Therefore, immunotoxicology studies are often conducted in laboratory animals to understand the scope and mechanism of chemical-induced immune suppression. Results of such studies can be used to develop biomarkers to assess effects in human populations. Infectious-disease models in animals can also be used to determine whether the pattern of disease changes with chemical exposure.

Allergic Diseases

The immune system sometimes responds to a foreign substance that is not pathogenic. Such immunogenic substances are called allergens. Like most immune-based diseases, allergic diseases have both environmental and genetic risk factors. Their prevalence has increased in many countries in recent decades (CDC, 2004; Linneberg et al., 2000; Simpson et al., 2008; Sly, 1999). Major forms of allergic diseases are asthma, allergic rhinitis, atopic dermatitis, and food allergy. In immediate hypersensitivity, the response to some allergens, such as pollen and bee venom, results in the production of immunoglobulin E (IgE) antibodies. Once produced, IgE antibodies bind to mast cells, specialized cells that occur in tissues throughout the body, including lung airways, the intestinal wall, and blood-vessel walls. When a person is exposed to the allergen again, it binds to the antibodies on the mast cells and causes them to release histamine and leukotrienes, which produce the symptoms associated with an allergic response. In delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) reactions, also known as cell-mediated immunity, other allergens, such as poison ivy and nickel, activate allergen-specific lymphocytes at the site of contact (usually the skin) that (memory T cells) release substances that cause inflammation and tissue damage. Some allergic responses, such as those to food allergens, may involve a combination of allergen-specific lymphocyte-driven and IgE-driven inflammation. Allergic responses may be man-

Suggested Citation:"7 Immune-System Disorders." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Veterans and Agent Orange: Update 2012. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18395.
×

ifested in specific tissues (such as skin, eyes, airways, and gastrointestinal tract) or may result in a system-wide response called anaphylaxis.

Autoimmune Diseases

The National Institutes of Health Autoimmune Disease Coordinating Committee recognizes 80 diseases and conditions that affect the cardiovascular, respiratory, nervous, endocrine, dermal, gastrointestinal, hepatic, and excretory systems and are classified as autoimmune diseases (NIH Autoimmune Diseases Coordinating Committee, 2005). They affect both men and women, but most affect more women than men (Fairweather et al., 2008). Genetic predisposition, age, hormone status, and such environmental factors as infectious diseases and stress are known to affect the risk of developing autoimmune diseases, and different autoimmune diseases tend to occur in the same person and to cluster in families. The existence of some autoimmune diseases is also a risk factor for the development of other immune-related diseases, such as some types of cancer (Landgren et al., 2010).

Autoimmune disease is an example of the immune system’s causing rather than preventing disease: the immune system attacks the body’s own cells and tissues as though they are foreign. Inappropriate immune responses that result in autoimmune disease can be promoted by different components of the immune system (such as antibodies and lymphocytes) and can be directed against a wide variety of tissues or organs. For example, the autoimmune reaction in multiple sclerosis is directed against the myelin sheath of the nervous system; in Crohn’s disease, the intestine is the target of attack; in type 1 diabetes mellitus, the insulin-producing cells of the pancreas are destroyed by the immune response; and rheumatoid arthritis arises from immune attack on the joints, but can also involve the lung, heart, and additional organs.

More generalized forms of autoimmune diseases also occur. Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is an autoimmune disease that has multiple target organs of immune attack. Instead, patients have a variety of symptoms that often occur in other diseases, and this makes diagnosis difficult. A characteristic rash across the cheeks and nose and sensitivity to sunlight are common symptoms; oral ulcers, arthritis, pleurisy, proteinuria, and neurologic disorders may be present. Almost all people who have SLE test positive for antinuclear antibodies in the absence of drugs known to induce them. The causes of SLE are unknown, but environmental and genetic factors have been implicated. Some of the environmental factors that may trigger it are infections, antibiotics (especially those in the sulfa and penicillin groups) and some other drugs, ultraviolet radiation, extreme stress, and hormones. Occupational exposures to such chemicals as crystalline silica, solvents, and pesticides have also been associated with SLE (Cooper and Parks, 2004; Parks and Cooper, 2005).

Suggested Citation:"7 Immune-System Disorders." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Veterans and Agent Orange: Update 2012. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18395.
×

Inflammatory Diseases

Inflammatory diseases (also referred to as auto-inflammatory diseases) make up a more recently identified category of immune-related disorders that are characterized by exaggerated, excessively prolonged, or misdirected dysfunctional inflammatory responses (usually involving immune cells). Tissue disease can result from this inappropriate inflammation, which can affect virtually any organ. Examples of diseases and other conditions that are most often included in other disease categories but are also considered to be inflammatory diseases are coronary arterial disease, asthma, eczema, chronic sinusitis, hepatic steatosis, psoriasis, celiac disease, and prostatitis. Inflammatory diseases often occur with one another, and this has resulted in the categorizing of different but linked inflammatory diseases together as a single chronic inflammatory disorder (Borensztajn et al., 2011); among these are atherosclerosis and chronic pulmonary obstructive disease. Inappropriate inflammation also appears to play a role in promoting the growth of cancer (Bornschein et al., 2010; Hillegass et al., 2010; Landgren et al., 2010; Porta et al., 2010; Winans et al., 2010); examples can be seen in the higher prevalence of specific cancers in patients who have such inflammatory diseases as inflammatory bowel disease (Lucas et al., 2010; Viennot et al., 2009; Westbrook et al., 2010), prostatitis (Sandhu, 2008; Wang et al., 2009), and psoriasis (Ji et al., 2009).

Ordinarily, inflammation can be advantageous in fighting infectious diseases. It is one component of the normal host response to infection and is mediated by innate immune cells. Inflammatory responses have evolved to speed the trafficking of macrophages, granulocytes, and some lymphocytes to the area of infection, where they produce toxic metabolites that kill pathogens. Interactions among innate immune cells and epithelial and endothelial cells are important in regulating the magnitude of inflammation. However, improperly regulated inflammation can contribute to diseases that arise in nonlymphoid tissues, such as the lungs, skin, nervous system, endocrine system, and reproductive system.

CONCLUSIONS FROM VAO AND PREVIOUS UPDATES

The following comments are restricted to findings related to the immune system that occur after adult human exposure. For a discussion of potential effects on the immune system arising from early-life (such as perinatal) exposures (which would not be directly applicable to the Vietnam veterans who are the target of this report), see Chapters 4 and 9. Studies that served as the basis of prior updates of VAO are shown in Table 7-1.

Vietnam Veterans

A handful of the direct studies of veterans listed in Table 7-1 reported a statistically significant difference in a single immune measure (Kim et al., 2003;

Suggested Citation:"7 Immune-System Disorders." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Veterans and Agent Orange: Update 2012. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18395.
×

TABLE 7-1 Selected Epidemiologic Studies—Immune Effects in Adult Humans (Shaded Entries Are New Information for This Update)

Study Population Exposure/Results Reference
VIETNAM VETERANS
US Air Force Health Study—Operation Ranch Hand veterans vs SEA veterans All COIs

Participants in 1997 examination cycle, Operation Ranch Hand veterans vs comparisons (incidence)

No change in surface markers for B and T cells, no change in serum Ig, no change in autoantibodies (antinuclear antibody, smooth muscle autoantibody, parietal cell autoantibody, rheumatoid factor, and monoclonal immunoglobulins) and no dose-related change in DTH response Michalek et al., 1999a

Participants in 1987 examination cycle, Operation Ranch Hand veterans vs comparisons (morbidity)

No change in surface markers for B and T cells Wolfe et al., 1990

Participants in 1985 examination cycle, Operation Ranch Hand veterans vs comparisons (morbidity and mortality)

No change in surface markers for B and T cells Wolfe et al., 1985
US CDC Vietnam Experience Study All COIs
Cross-sectional study, with medical examinations, of Army veterans: 9,324 deployed vs 8,989 nondeployed

Morbidity—Deployed vs nondeployed

No differences in infections, no changes in B and T cell-surface markers, WBC counts, or circulating serum Ig CDC, 1988b

Mortality (1965–2000)

No increase in infectious or parasitic diseases Boehmer et al., 2004
US VA Cohort of Monozygotic Twins All COIs

Physical health—morbidity

Increase in skin conditions of unknown etiology, no increase in blood disorders Eisen et al., 1991
US American Legion Cohort All COIs

Physical health and reproductive outcomes

Increase in skin conditions and arthritis Stellman et al., 1988
State Studies of US Vietnam Veterans All COIs

Michigan Vietnam Veterans (deployed vs nondeployed)

Increased mortality from infectious (including parasitic) diseases Visintainer et al., 1995
Suggested Citation:"7 Immune-System Disorders." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Veterans and Agent Orange: Update 2012. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18395.
×
Study Population Exposure/Results Reference

New Jersey Agent Orange Commission

Depressed response to tetanus in DTH tests, decrease in CD4 and SmIg+ B cells Kahn et al., 1992

Texas Agent Orange Advisory Committee

Increase in percentage of active T rosette-forming cells Newell, 1984
Sample of 1,000 Male Australian Vietnam Veterans–prevelance All COIs

Australian Vietnam Veterans—longitudinal cohort study of 67 conditions in randomly selected Vietnam veterans vs general population

Increase in hay fever, increases in infectious and parasitic diseases, increase in arthritis O’Toole et al., 2009
Australian Conscripted Army National Service (18,940 deployed vs 24,642 nondeployed) All COIs

1983–1985—Australian Vietnam Veterans—longitudinal cohort study of 67 conditions in randomly selected Vietnam veterans vs general population

Increase in hay fever, increases in infectious and parasitic diseases, increase in arthritis CDVA, 1997b
Korean Vietnam Veterans All COIs

Immunotoxicologic study

Increase in IgE and IL-4, decrease in IgG1 and IFN-gamma, no change in lymphocyte counts Kim et al., 2003
Vietnamese Vietnam Veterans All COIs

Antinuclear and sperm autoantibodies

No change in autoantibodies to sperm, antinuclear bodies Chinh et al., 1996
OCCUPATIONAL STUDIES

IARC Phenoxy Herbicide Cohort—Subset of Dutch workers (n = 85) from 2 plants that produced and formulated chlorophenoxy herbicides (high exposure = 47, low exposure = 38); serum collected 30 yrs after exposure

Chlorophenoxy herbicides/General reduction in most analyte levels with the strongest effects for fractalkine, fibroblast growth factor (FGF2), and transforming growth factor alpha (TGF-α) Saberi Hosnijeh et al., 2012

IARC Phenoxy Herbicide CohortDutch workers from 2 plants that produced and formulated chlorophenoxy herbicides (Plant A, n = 1,167; Plant B, n = 1,143).

Chlorophenoxy herbicides/Negative correlation between TCDD exposure and markers of humoral immunity, except perhaps for C4 Saberi Hosnijeh et al., 2012
Suggested Citation:"7 Immune-System Disorders." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Veterans and Agent Orange: Update 2012. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18395.
×
Study Population Exposure/Results Reference
IARC Phenoxy Herbicide Cohort—German production workers (2,479 workers at 4 plants, in IARC as of 1997) Dioxins, phenoxy herbicides

Cross-sectional study of 153 male workers in six chemical plants in Germany

TCDD (during production of TCP): DTH responses not correlated with dioxin concentration; slight decrease in IgM was reported with increasing dioxin exposure; overall lymphoid counts not different Benner et al., 1994
German production workers at BASF Ludwigshafen Plant—BASF Cleanup workers from 1953 accident (n = 247); 114 with chloracne, 13 more with erythema; serum TCDD levels (not part of IARC) Focus on TCDD

138 surviving workers from a larger cohort of 254 exposed workers after an accident in a BASF TCP production facility

TCDD: Among 14 immune measures; regression analysis of TCDD concentration suggested marginal positive associations with IgG, IgA, C3, and C4; marginal reductions in some lymphocyte population were also reported Ott et al., 1994
IARC Phenoxy Herbicide Cohort—German production workers at Boehringer-Ingelheim Plant in Hamburg (1,144 men working > 1 month in 1952–1984; generation of TCDD reduced after chloracne outbreak in 1954) Dioxins, 2,4,5-T; 2,5-DCP; 2,4,5-TCP

Updated and expanded evaluation of 158 workers in a German chemical plant with differing exposure studied in two trials

TCDD (or “TCDD toxic equivalents” from PCDD/PCDF): No differences in serum Ig or cytokine (IL1, IL6, TNF-alpha) Neubert et al., 2000

19 highly exposed chemical workers vs 28 unexposed controls in two chemical plants in Hamburg, Germany

TCDD (in chemical plant): In subset of leukocytes, increase in CD8+ memory T cells and decrease in naïve T cells (CD45RA+) after TCDD exposure, as was stimulated IFN-gamma production from whole blood cultures associated with TCDD exposure Ernst et al., 1998
Suggested Citation:"7 Immune-System Disorders." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Veterans and Agent Orange: Update 2012. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18395.
×
Study Population Exposure/Results Reference

192 workers in a German pesticide plant, including 29 highly exposed and 28 controls compared for immune functional tests

TCDD (or TEQs from PCDD/PCDF exposure): No significant changes in TCDD and lymphocyte subsets, antibody responses to vaccination, lymphocyte proliferation, or autoantibody production; decrease in chromate resistance of PHA-stimulated lymphocytes in highest exposure group Jung et al., 1998

Comparison of 11 2,4,5-trichlorophenol production workers 20 years after exposure vs 10 unexposed age-matched workers in the same company

TCDD: No differences in any lymphoid subset or in mitogen-induced proliferation; TCDD exposure was associated with decreases in MLR response and in stimulation with IL-2 in vitro Tonn et al., 1996

Examination of eight trichlorophenol production workers who developed chloracne and were reexamined 15–25 years after initial exposure

TCDD: Reduced gamma globulins in the most-exposed workers; no significant effects on T4, T8 ratios. Jansing and Korff, 1994

89 volunteers involved in decontamination work at a chemical plant in Hamburg, Germany; no control population

TCDD (or equivalents via PCDD/PCDF exposure): Potentially complicated by age differences among the compared groups; only subtle, clinically nonsignificant changes were seen among immune-cell surface markers in a comparison of higher exposed vs low-exposed to moderately exposed workers Neubert et al., 1993, 1994
NIOSH Cohort (current and former workers from chemical plants in New Jersey and Missouri, 2 of the 12 plants included in the NIOSH Mortality Study) Dioxins, phenoxy herbicides

Cross-sectional study of 259 TCDD-exposed 2,4,5-trichlorophenate (and its derivatives) workers (mean serum TCDD, 223 ppt) and 243 unexposed residential controls (mean serum TCDD, 6 ppt)

TCDD (exposure in a chemical plant): No significant changes in serum Ig or major leukocyte categories; TCDD associated with decreased circulating CD26 cells (activated T cells) Halperin et al., 1998

1987 cross-sectional study of 281 chemical-plant workers in NJ and MO at least 15 years after exposure vs 260 unexposed controls

TCDD (as a contaminant in chemical production): Increase in TCDD associated with a decrease in CD3/Ta1 (helper lymphocytes) cells Sweeney et al., 1997/1998
Other Studies of Industrial Workers (not related to IARC or NIOSH phenoxy cohorts)
Suggested Citation:"7 Immune-System Disorders." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Veterans and Agent Orange: Update 2012. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18395.
×
Study Population Exposure/Results Reference

EUROPIT Study—Prospective multicenter cohort study (Bulgaria, Finland, Italy, The Netherlands) of 238 pesticide-exposed workers vs 198 unexposed workers

Pesticide factories (not specifically TCDD): Reduced antibody responses to hepatitis B vaccination among exposed workers carrying a specific IL-1 allele Baranska et al., 2008
OCCUPATIONAL—HERBICIDE-USING WORKERS (not related to IARC sprayer cohorts)
Agricultural Health Study (AHS)—prospective study of licensed pesticide sprayers in Iowa and North Carolina: commercial (n = 4,916 men), private/ farmers (n = 52,395, 97.4% men), and spouses of private sprayers (n = 32,347, 0.007% men), enrolled 1993–1997; followups with CATIs 1999–2003 and 2005–2010 Pesticides/herbicides

Comparison from the AHS of 534 cases of self-reported physician-diagnosed depression vs 17,051 controls

Both high-level acute pesticide exposure (OR = 2.6, 95% CI 1.7–3.8) and cumulative pesticide exposure (OR = 1.5, 95% CI 1.2–2.0) were positively associated with increase in depression Beseler et al., 2008

29,074 female spouses of pesticide applicators in the AHS

Depression was significantly associated with pesticide poisoning (OR = 3.3, 95% CI 1.7–6.2) but not with lower cumulative exposure Beseler et al., 2006

Nested case-control study of rheumatoid arthritis in agricultural families (57,000 pesticide applicators and their spouses)

No strong risk factors were identified for pesticide mixing or application or for any specific class of pesticides in the AHS of rheumatoid arthritis De Roos et al., 2005b
Other Studies of Herbicide-Using Workers

Longitudinal study of 10 farmers during 1994 within 7 days before and 1–12 days and 50–70 days after exposure

2,4-D and MCPA formulations: Decreases in percentages of CD4, CD8, CTL, CD8-DR, and NK cells and in NK activity and mitogen-stimulated lymphoproliferation; CD4:CD8 ratio was unaltered; CD3 and CD8 percentages had recovered by the second assessment period; no significant correlations between immune changes and amount of pesticides applied Faustini et al., 1996
Suggested Citation:"7 Immune-System Disorders." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Veterans and Agent Orange: Update 2012. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18395.
×
Study Population Exposure/Results Reference
ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES
Seveso Cleanup Workers TCDD
Prospective study using analysis of samples from 36 cleanup workers (divided into three groups based on time spent in the contamination area); pre-employment samples and samples after 9 months were analyzed for comparison with samples from 31 nonexposed workers No differences in WBC counts and platelet counts Ghezzi et al., 1982
Seveso, Italy, Residential Cohort—Industrial accident July 10, 1976 (723 residents Zone A; 4,821 Zone B; 31,643 Zone R; 181,574 local reference group) TCDD

Study of 101 chloracne cases vs 211 controls 20 years after the accident; relatively low statistical power was available because the study examined the occurrence of individual diseases

Persistent increase in TCDD in chloracne cases; younger people seemed to be more susceptible; no major trends in disease occurrence Baccarelli et al., 2005b

Study of 62 people from a highly exposed zone and 53 from noncontaminated areas 20 years after the accident

Plasma concentration of TCDD was determined; multivariate regression analysis showed significant decrease in plasma IgG with increasing TCDD concentration and no changes in IgM, IgA, or C3 Baccarelli et al., 2002

45 children (3–7 years of age) living in exposed areas vs 45 nonexposed children as controls

No differences in serum IG, mitogen responses of lymphocytes (PHA and pokeweed), or percentage of rosette-forming lymphocytes Pocchiari et al., 1979
Times Beach (MO) Cohort TCDD

Regression analysis used for comparisons among 41 exposed people for adipose-tissue, TCDD vs immune measures; three exposed groups defined by tissue dioxin

No TCDD–DTH response relationships were reported; no change in mitogen responsiveness; some serum markers (A/G ratio and serum IgG) were affected Webb et al., 1989

82 people in more highly contaminated areas vs 40 in low-risk exposure areas as controls

No differences in DTH response or T-cell subsets (T4/T8) Webb et al., 1987

80 people in highly contaminated areas vs 40 controls in lower-risk areas

No differences in DTH induration or T-cell subset analysis (T4/T8) Stehr et al., 1986
Suggested Citation:"7 Immune-System Disorders." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Veterans and Agent Orange: Update 2012. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18395.
×
Study Population Exposure/Results Reference

Pilot study of small numbers of people; for comparisons, people were assigned to two environmental-exposure groups: those in high-risk areas (27 men, 23 women, and 15 children) and those in low-risk areas (12 men, 10 women, and 8 children)

Multitest DTH evaluation to seven recall antigens was performed, no statistical differences were reported, and only trends were noted; no statistical differences were reported for T-cell markers (T3, T4, and T8) or mitogen-induced lymphocyte proliferation (PHA, Con A, and pokeweed mitogen), and . only trends were noted Knutsen, 1984
Quail Run Mobile Home Park (MO) Cohort TCDD

A subset of the previously anergic persons in the Stehr-Green et al. (1987) study were reevaluated in the DTH test with a higher DTH test dose and highly trained, blinded readers

Retesting of DTH failed to produce the differences observed initially Evans et al., 1988

Small (ill-defined) samples were used; comparisons of residents of the Quail Run Mobile Home Park with residents of St. Louis–area trailer parks as controls

DTH suppression in the exposed group was reported, but data from two of four readers were discarded; no differences in T-cell mitogen stimulation; decreases in percentages of T3, T4, and T11 cells in the exposed group Knutsen et al., 1987

154 people in highly contaminated area vs 155 in three low–environmental-contamination areas as controls

Increase in anergy and decrease in induration for DTH in exposed group; data from some readers were excluded; decrease in percentages of T3, T4, and T11 cells, but no difference in cell number of T4/T8 ratio Stehr-Green et al., 1987

80 people in a high–exposure risk group vs 40 controls

Decreases in DTH indurations, number of positive reactors, and percentages of T3, T4, and T11 cells in the exposed group Andrews et al., 1986

154 people in the exposed area vs 155 nonexposed people in an uncontaminated area

Recall antigen multitest for DTH, increase in percentage of anergy and decrease in induration in exposed group; data from two of four readers were excluded Hoffman et al., 1986
Suggested Citation:"7 Immune-System Disorders." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Veterans and Agent Orange: Update 2012. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18395.
×
Study Population Exposure/Results Reference
Other Environmental Studies
Belgium (Flanders)—200 people 17–18 yr of age in three areas of Flanders (Belgium); TEQ values were calculated from serum dioxin-like PCB concentrations and relationships with immune measures were examined Dioxins and PCBs: Decreases in eosinophil and NK-cell counts with increasing TEQ; IgE concentrations; history of upper airway allergy, and odds of a positive RAST test correlated negatively with serum TEQ; IgA concentrations correlated positively with TEQ Van den Heuvel et al., 2002
Germany—Cross-sectional study of 221 teachers who worked in German day-care centers treated with wood preservatives vs 189 teachers who worked in untreated facilities Dioxin in wood preservatives, exposure primarily via inhalation: No effects of inhaled dioxin were seen on T4 or T8 cell numbers or on the ratio; some evidence of a dose–response relationship was seen for risk of anergy (or hypoergy) in the DTH assay Wolf and Karmaus, 1995
US (NHANES)—1,721 adults were assessed for serum dioxin-like PCBs and self-reported arthritis Dioxin-like PCBs: Association between serum dioxin-like PCBs and prevalence of arthritis particularly among women Lee et al., 2007a
CASE-CONTROL STUDIES
Norway—blood samples from 24 Norwegian hobby fishermen were compared with those of 10 male referents as controls PCDD, exposure from food: The study generally lacks experimental details; no differences in an NK cell marker or in NK activity were seen; apparently, some effects on lymphoid markers were observed but specific details are lacking Lovik et al., 1996
Sweden—23 high consumers of fatty fish from the Baltic Sea (containing low concentrations of PCDD) vs 20 low consumers or nonconsumers of fish as controls PCDD, exposure from food: Blood PCDDs were significantly different between the groups; mercury concentrations also differed; NK cells correlated negatively with blood concentrations of persistent organic chemicals; no other Svensson et al., 1994
South Korea (Ansan)—comparison of immune measures in 31 waste-incineration workers vs 84 controls TCDD (via waste incineration): Lymphoid subsets, IFN-gamma, and Ig not statistically different; decrease in IL-4 and increase in T-cell activation (measured as combined CD3 and CD69 markers) associated with TCDD exposure Oh et al., 2005
Suggested Citation:"7 Immune-System Disorders." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Veterans and Agent Orange: Update 2012. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18395.
×
Study Population Exposure/Results Reference
United Kingdom (Derbyshire)—18 chemical workers in a 2,4,5-T in the Coalite Oils and Chemical, Ltd. factory exposed as a result of an industrial accident 17 years before study vs 15 matched controls TCDD: No changes in serum Ig classes, increases in antinuclear antibodies and immune complexes, and increase in circulating NK cells (Leu7+) in exposed workers Jennings et al., 1988
United States (California)—telephone interviews concerning environmental and occupational chemical exposures were conducted with 50 AIDS patients (with Kaposi sarcoma) and 50 homosexual men as controls Chemical exposures, including pesticides, and Agent Orange: No significant differences were reported in a small study that generally lacked focus Hardell et al., 1987

NOTE: 2,4-D, 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid; 2,4,5-T, 2,4,5-trichlorophenoxyacetic acid; AHS, Agricultural Health Study; CDC, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; CI, confidence interval; COI, chemical of interest; Con A, concanavalin A; DTH, delayed-type hypersensitivity; IFN-gamma, interferon-gamma; Ig, immunoglobulin; IL, interleukin; MCPA, methyl-4-chlorophenoxyacetic acid; MLR, mixed lymphocyte response; MO, Missouri; NHANES, National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey; NIOSH, National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health; NK, natural killer; OR, odds ratio; PCB, polychlorinated biphenyl; PCDD, polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxin (highly chlorinated, if four or more chlorines); PCDF, polychlorinated dibenzofurans; PHA, polyhydroxyalkanoates; RAST, radioallergosorbent; SEA, Southeast Asia; TCDD, 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin; TCP, trichlorophenol; TEQ, total toxic equivalent; TNF, tumor necrosis factor; VA, Department of Veterans Affairs; WBC, white blood cell.

Michalek et al., 1999a). But invariably the same effect was not found in other studies of Vietnam veterans, nor was support found in epidemiologic studies of other populations. Thus, there were no consistent findings indicative of immunosuppression, increased risk of autoimmunity (usually as measured with autoantibodies), or biomarkers of atopy or allergy (such as increased IgE concentrations). Much of the focus of the studies was on measuring T4:T8 ratios. The T4:T8 ratio is an effective biomarker of the progression of HIV-induced AIDS, but, on the basis of the TCDD-exposure animal data, it is not an immunologic index that is expected to be altered. The results of a survey of Australian Vietnam veterans (O’Toole et al., 2009) included purportedly significant increases in the prevalence of a number of conditions in which immune function may play a prominent role, but the study’s methods were deemed unreliable.

Occupational Exposures

Occupational-exposure studies shown in Table 7-1 evaluated concentrations of lymphoid populations in circulation, such as CD4, CD8 (and the ratio of the two), and natural killer (NK) cells; cell-mediated immunity (the delayed-hyper-

Suggested Citation:"7 Immune-System Disorders." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Veterans and Agent Orange: Update 2012. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18395.
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sensitivity response); serum concentrations of immunoglobulins, such as IgM, IgG, and IgA; concentrations of complement, such as C3 and C4; and concentrations of cytokines, such as IL-1, IL-2, interferon-gamma, IL-4, IL-6, and tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha. A few studies also included disease or condition endpoints, such as rheumatoid arthritis, SLE, and depression. Ex vivo analyses included measures of NK activity, lymphoid mitogen-induced proliferation, and the mixed lymphocyte response (MLR) against allogeneic cells. Some studies identified one or more dioxin-related shifts in immune measures, but many reported no significant differences in the same measures. That is particularly true of the study by Neubert et al. (2000), which measured toxicity equivalents (TEQs) for dioxin but found no immunoglobulin or cytokine alterations. In general, the spectrum of occupational-exposure findings does not provide a consistent or clear picture of alterations in immune measures that could be extrapolated to an increased risk of a single disease or even a broader category of diseases. The exception may be observations of pesticide-associated autoimmunity and depression. Immune depression was rather consistently associated with very high pesticide exposures or pesticide poisonings. However, because the studies generally concerned broad categories of pesticide exposure, their relevance to herbicide exposures in Vietnam is not clear.

Environmental Exposures

Several environmental-exposure studies reported alterations, but findings were inconsistent among the studies (see Table 7-1). Some studies reported alterations in immune measures associated with TEQs for dioxin. For example, Van den Heuvel et al. (2002) reported that IgE, positive radioallergosorbent (RAST) tests in response to specific allergens, eosinophil counts, and NK-cell counts correlated negatively with dioxin TEQs but that IgA increased; these alterations, however, were not seen consistently in other studies. Baccarelli et al. (2002) found no changes in IgA but saw changes in IgG in the Seveso population. Svensson et al. (1994) found that NK-cell numbers were reduced with increasing concentrations of persistent organic chemicals, but Lovik et al. (1996) found no difference in NK numbers or activity. Similarly, the occupational-exposure studies (see Table 7-1) that examined NK concentrations reported the full spectrum of results: no alterations (Halperin et al., 1998), a decrease (Faustini et al., 1996), and even an increase in NK numbers (Jennings et al., 1988) in dioxin-exposed people.

As seen in Table 7-1, some early studies of the Quail Run Mobile Home Park population exposures reported that dioxin exposure was associated with a reduced cell-mediated immune response, the delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) response (Andrews et al., 1986; Hoffman et al., 1986; Knutsen et al., 1987; Stehr-Green et al., 1987). But some of those studies had technical problems in assessment and in followup analyses. Dioxin-associated changes were not confirmed (Evans et al., 1988; Webb et al., 1989). In addition, several studies of the Times

Suggested Citation:"7 Immune-System Disorders." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Veterans and Agent Orange: Update 2012. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18395.
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Beach population did not find any alteration of the DTH response in dioxin-exposed populations (Knutsen, 1984; Stehr et al., 1986; Webb et al., 1987).

Analysis of National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) data found that exposure to dioxin-like polychlorinated biphenyls was associated with an increase in self-reported arthritis (Lee et al., 2007a), but De Roos et al. (2005b) had found no such association in their study.

Prior VAO updates have concluded that human data were either insufficient or inconsistent with respect to an increased risk of immunosuppression, allergic disease, or autoimmune disease.

UPDATE OF THE EPIDEMIOLOGIC LITERATURE AND HUMAN STUDIES

Vietnam-Veteran and Case-Control Studies

No new case-control studies or studies of Vietnam veterans exposed to the COIs and adverse immunologic conditions have been published since Update 2010.

Occupational Studies

There were several small new studies of occupational cohorts. Endres et al. (2012) studied fungal sensitization in the Agricultural Health Study and reported that farmers had levels of fungal sensitization lower than the national levels found in the NHANES studies. It is difficult to interpret those data, although they do suggest that farmers as a group have a lower reactivity to fungal antigens.

Saberi Hosnijeh et al. (2011) studied Dutch phenoxy-herbicide workers, assessing their humoral immunity. The 45 TCDD-exposed workers had decreased concentrations of complement factor 4 but no other apparent changes in humoral immunity as measured by other complement factors or immunoglobulins. The same authors (Saberi Hosnijeh et al., 2012) reported that plasma TCDD concentrations were associated with decreases in cytokines, chemokines, and growth factors. The authors conclude that this work provided evidence of immunologic effects of TCDD.

Environmental Studies

No environmental studies of adverse immunologic conditions have been published since the 2010 review. However, a report of an investigation of the immune response of a single highly exposed person (Brembilla et al., 2011) reported some clearly TCDD-associated immune changes (such as IL-22 production by CD4+ T cells), confirming some TCDD-associated changes in immune measures. It is interesting that there was no measured effect of TCDD exposure on the

Suggested Citation:"7 Immune-System Disorders." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Veterans and Agent Orange: Update 2012. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18395.
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person’s T regulatory cells. Earlier publications cited indicate that this patient was Victor Yuchenko, whose poisoning in 2004 has provided insight into human response to and biotransformation of an extremely high dose of TCDD, exceeding by orders of magnitude the exposures experienced by Vietnam veterans.

The literature searches for the current update found two epidemiologic studies (Jusko et al., 2011; Miyashita et al., 2011) that addressed immune-related outcomes in the children of mothers potentially exposed to the COIs (the topic of Chapter 10) that are not relevant to assessing immune consequences in Vietnam veterans of their own exposure.

BIOLOGIC PLAUSIBILITY

There is an extensive body of evidence from experimental studies in animal-model systems that TCDD, other dioxins, and several dioxin-like chemicals (DLCs) are immunotoxic (Kerkvliet, 2009, 2012). Immunotoxicity is due primarily to changes in adaptive immune responses that result in suppression of both antibody-mediated and cell-mediated immunity. A new endogenous pathway, the tryptophan metabolic pathway, has recently been identified as affecting the aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AHR) and immune biology (Opitz et al., 2011). Dioxin and related chemicals with dioxin-like activity may induce a reduction in the ability to clear pathogenic infections and prevent tumor growth in a fashion that is mediated by endogenous pathways. Studies in laboratory mice have shown that the immunotoxicity of TCDD and DLCs depends on activation of the AHR. Most of the cell types involved in the immune system express the AHR, so there are many potential pathways to immunotoxicity. TCDD has also been shown to alter macrophages and neutrophils in a manner that exacerbates some forms of inflammation during infections and may contribute to the development of chronic inflammatory lung disease (Teske et al., 2005; Wong et al., 2010). Other recent work shows that the AHR is involved in hematopoiesis at multiple stages (Baba et al., 2012; Sibilano et al., 2012; Simones and Shepherd, 2011; Singh et al., 2011). Working with human B cells in vitro, Allan and Sherr (2010) demonstrated a new AHR-dependent mechanism by which exposure to environmental polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons could suppress humoral immunity by blocking differentiation of B cells into plasma cells.

TCDD is a potent immunosuppressive chemical in laboratory animals. The relative potencies of given DLCs based on induction hepatic enzymes—their toxicity equivalence factors (TEFs)—appear to predict the degree of immunosuppression induced (Smialowicz et al., 2008). TCDD has also been shown to induce apoptosis in rabbit chondrocytes, and this supports a potential role of TCDD in contributing in a novel way to arthritis (Yang and Lee, 2010). Exposure of animals to dioxin not only suppresses some adaptive immune responses but also has been shown to increase the incidence and severity of various infectious diseases and to increase the development of cancer (Choi et al., 2003; Elizondo et al., 2011;

Suggested Citation:"7 Immune-System Disorders." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Veterans and Agent Orange: Update 2012. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18395.
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Fiorito et al., 2010, 2011; Head and Lawrence, 2009; Jin et al., 2010; Sanchez et al., 2010). It is consistent with its immunosuppressive effects that TCDD exposure suppresses the allergic immune response of rodents; this in turn results in decreased allergen-associated pathologic lung conditions and has recently been shown to suppress the development of experimental autoimmune disease (Quintana et al., 2008), to induce the suppression of autoimmune uveoretinitis (Zhang et al., 2010), and to affect colitis (Takamura et al., 2011), arthritis (Nakahama et al., 2011), and inflammatory lung diseases, such as silicosis (Beamer et al., 2012). A recent study of 18 people who had allergic asthma, 17 people whose asthma was controlled, and 12 controls showed that the plasma concentrations of IL-22 and the expression of the AHR in peripheral blood mononuclear cells was associated with the severity of allergic asthma; this finding strengthened the possibility that the AHR is involved in allergic asthma, thereby implying a role for dioxin exposure in this condition (Zhu et al., 2011). Thus, depending on the disease, TCDD exposure could exacerbate or ameliorate symptoms.

Recent attention has focused on the ability of the AHR to induce regulatory T cells, or Tregs (Kerkvliet, 2012; Marshall and Kerkvliet, 2010). Tregs have potent suppressive activity in the immune system, and their inappropriate induction by TCDD could account for much of the immune suppression. AHR activation in dendritic cells has also been shown to promote the development of Tregs by inducing tryptophan metabolism. AHR activation in B cells can directly disrupt the production of antibodies (Sulentic and Kaminski, 2011). The recent demonstration that AHR activation by TCDD leads to the development of Tregs helps to explain the diversity of effects seen after exposure to TCDD (Funatake et al., 2008; Kerkvliet, 2012; Marshall et al., 2008; Quintana et al., 2008; Stockinger et al., 2011; Yamamoto and Shlomchik, 2010).

Recent data indicate that the AHR pathway plays an integral role in B-cell maturation, and that TCDD and DLC exposure may alter the function of these cells and result in critical changes in the immune response. Suppression of the immune response by TCDD and similar compounds in mice has been known for over 30 years, but the effect on human cells is less clear. Some recent reports indicate that TCDD and DLC elicit similar effects in humans. Activation of non-transformed human B cells results in an increase in expression of the AHR, indicating that this pathway has a role in normal B-cell function (Allan and Sherr, 2010). Furthermore, treatment of those cells with B[a]P suppresses B-cell differentiation. Lu et al. (2010) demonstrated that although human B cells appeared less responsive to TCDD in increasing expression of AHR battery genes, the ability of TCDD to decrease IgM production was similar in both mouse and human B cells. In addition, data from human hemopoietic stem cells (HSCs) and knockout AHR mouse models show that the AHR is critical in HSC maturation and differentiation (Fracchiolla et al., 2011; Singh et al., 2011). TCDD not only alters HSC maturation but also alters proliferation and migration in vivo and in

Suggested Citation:"7 Immune-System Disorders." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Veterans and Agent Orange: Update 2012. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18395.
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vitro (Casado et al., 2011), and this indicates that exposure may have multiple effects on immune-cell function.

SYNTHESIS

Immune Suppression

One would expect exposure to substantial doses of TCDD to result in immune suppression in Vietnam veterans. However, several studies of various measures of human immune function failed to reveal consistent correlations with TCDD exposure, probably because the exposures were inadequate to produce immune suppression or because the characteristics measured were not among those most relevant with respect to biologic plausibility. No clear pattern of an increase in infectious disease has been documented in the studies of veterans exposed to TCDD or to the herbicides used in Vietnam. However, three occupational-exposure studies provide some support for the idea that exposure to TCDD may result in an altered immune response to some exposures and an increased frequency of infections. The study of a single highly exposed person (Brembilla et al., 2011) confirmed TCDD-associated changes in immune measures that may not be applicable to people whose exposure was considerably lower. Immune alteration and the frequency and duration of specific types of infections should therefore be a focus of future studies. Suppression of the immune response by TCDD might increase the risk of some kinds of cancer in Vietnam veterans, but there is no evidence to support the connection.

Allergic and Autoimmune Diseases

Epidemiologic studies have been inconsistent with regard to TCDD’s influence on IgE production in humans. No human studies have specifically addressed the influence of TCDD on autoimmune disease, but several animal studies have shown that TCDD suppresses the development of autoimmune diseases. In studying postservice mortality, Boehmer et al. (2004) found no increase in deaths of Vietnam veterans that could be attributed to immune-system disorders. There is no experimental evidence to support that finding, but increased inflammatory responses could be involved. The study of people who had allergic asthma or controlled asthma strengthened the data and suggested that the AHR (and thus dioxin exposure) is involved in the disease (Zhu et al., 2011). Future studies are needed to determine a potential mechanism of TCDD-induced allergic and autoimmune disease, including rheumatoid arthritis.

Few effects of phenoxy herbicide or cacodylic acid exposure on the immune system have been reported in animals or humans, and no clear association between such exposure and autoimmune or allergic disease has been found.

Suggested Citation:"7 Immune-System Disorders." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Veterans and Agent Orange: Update 2012. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18395.
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Exposure of laboratory animals to phenoxy herbicides or cacodylic acid has not been associated with immunotoxicity.

Inflammatory Diseases

There are no human data on the potential for dioxin or the herbicides of interest to induce dysregulation of inflammation that could contribute to an increased risk of inflammation-associated diseases.

Possible associations involving infectious or inflammation-related diseases should be a focus for the future. Examples of earlier studies whose results support the occurrence of such adverse outcomes are Baccarelli et al. (2002), Baranska et al. (2008), Beseler et al. (2008), Oh et al. (2005), O’Toole et al. (2009), Tonn et al. (1996), and Visintainer et al. (1995).

CONCLUSIONS

On the basis of the evidence reviewed here and in previous VAO reports, the present committee concludes that there is inadequate or insufficient evidence to determine whether there is an association between exposure to the COIs and specific infectious, allergic, or autoimmune diseases.

TRANSLATION BETWEEN ANIMAL AND HUMAN STUDIES

Animal studies and in vitro studies with human cells and cell lines are important ways of trying to understand underlying biologic mechanisms associated with immunotoxic and other responses to xenobiotics, which are “foreign” substances that do not normally occur in biologic systems. However, as discussed above, despite the vast array of data supporting the immunotoxicity of TCDD in laboratory animals, little evidence from studies of Vietnam veterans or other human populations suggests that TCDD or the herbicides of concern produce immune alterations. Many factors must be considered in examining the relevance of animal and in vitro studies to human disease and disease progression, and they are discussed in Chapter 4. Here, we present the factors that are probably most important in considering differences between the results of laboratory studies and the findings of observational epidemiologic studies.

Magnitude and Timing of Exposure

In general, the TCDD exposures used in animal studies have been orders of magnitude higher than exposures that Vietnam veterans are likely to have received during military service. It is well known that the immune system is highly susceptible to xenobiotic exposure during critical stages of development,

Suggested Citation:"7 Immune-System Disorders." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Veterans and Agent Orange: Update 2012. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18395.
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such as gestation, and that primary immune responses are easier to alter than are secondary immune responses. In vivo studies show that exposure to antigens may be important, so the timing of antigen exposure relative to TCDD exposure may be an important variable.

Genetic Susceptibilities

Human immune diseases are likely to have complex etiologies and to be under the influence of numerous genes and gene-environment interactions (Dietert et al., 2010). Differences in AHR affinity between species may be a factor in animal-to-human extrapolation. For example, many strains of mice (AHRb) are known to exhibit greater susceptibility of CYP1A1 induction and immune suppression than are other strains (AHRd). In contrast, a simple single-haplotype difference in susceptibility to TCDD has not been observed in humans. Rats appear to be more similar to the resistant AHRd phenotype of mice in their sensitivity to TCDD. Indeed, it is difficult to produce immune suppression in rats with TCDD because of that, and there probably are other genetic reasons as well.

Sex Differences

There are well-known differences in susceptibility to xenobiotic exposures between male and female animals. There are probably multiple reasons for the differences, some of which may pertain to immunomodulation by sex steroids. Similarly, evidence suggests that specific immune-based health risks in humans have important sex differences. For example, women generally are much more susceptible than are men to the development of several autoimmune diseases; such differences in humans may result from a combination of genetic factors and environmental exposures. That has ramifications for future studies. In considering the potential effects of Agent Orange on the immune system and the risk of disease, sex-based differences in chemically induced adverse immune outcomes need to be investigated. Future studies should ensure that—whether in animal models or in human studies—gene-specific or sex-specific immune effects are able to be evaluated with sufficient statistical power to support distinctions.

Stress

Stress is a well-known modifier of human immune responses. It is an everpresent variable that is difficult to assess or control for in epidemiologic studies.

Suggested Citation:"7 Immune-System Disorders." Institute of Medicine. 2014. Veterans and Agent Orange: Update 2012. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/18395.
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From 1962 to 1971, the US military sprayed herbicides over Vietnam to strip the thick jungle canopy that could conceal opposition forces, to destroy crops that those forces might depend on, and to clear tall grasses and bushes from the perimeters of US base camps and outlying fire-support bases. Mixtures of 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-D), 2,4,5-trichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4,5-T), picloram, and cacodylic acid made up the bulk of the herbicides sprayed. The main chemical mixture sprayed was Agent Orange, a 50:50 mixture of 2,4-D and 2,4,5-T. At the time of the spraying, 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD), the most toxic form of dioxin, was an unintended contaminant generated during the production of 2,4,5-T and so was present in Agent Orange and some other formulations sprayed in Vietnam.

Because of complaints from returning Vietnam veterans about their own health and that of their children combined with emerging toxicologic evidence of adverse effects of phenoxy herbicides and TCDD, the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) was asked to perform a comprehensive evaluation of scientific and medical information regarding the health effects of exposure to Agent Orange, other herbicides used in Vietnam, and the various components of those herbicides, including TCDD. Updated evaluations are conducted every two years to review newly available literature and draw conclusions from the overall evidence.Veterans and Agent Orange: Update 2012 reviews peer-reviewed scientific reports concerning associations between health outcomes and exposure to TCDD and other chemicals in the herbicides used in Vietnam that were published in October 2010--September 2012 and integrates this information with the previously established evidence database. This report considers whether a statistical association with herbicide exposure exists, taking into account the strength of the scientific evidence and the appropriateness of the statistical and epidemiological methods used to detect the association; the increased risk of disease among those exposed to herbicides during service in the Republic of Vietnam during the Vietnam era; and whether there exists a plausible biological mechanism or other evidence of a causal relationship between herbicide exposure and the disease.

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