Interventions to Reduce Serum Per- and Poly-Fluoroalkyl Substances Levels, Improve Cardiovascular Risk Profiles, and Improve Epigenetic Age Acceleration in US Firefighters: Protocol for Randomized Controlled Trial
Reagan Conner, Cynthia Porter, Karen Lutrick, Shawn C Beitel, James Hollister, Olivia Healy, Krystal J Kern, Floris Wardenaar, John J Gulotta, Kepra Jack, Matthew Huentelman, Jefferey L Burgess, Melissa Furlong

TL;DR
This study tests if blood donation, exercise, and fasting can reduce harmful chemicals in firefighters' blood and improve their health.
Contribution
The study introduces a randomized trial to evaluate interventions for reducing PFAS levels and improving health in firefighters.
Findings
The trial will assess if blood donation reduces serum PFAS levels in firefighters.
Physical activity and intermittent fasting will be tested for cardiovascular and cognitive benefits.
Epigenetic age acceleration and overall disease risk will be measured across all intervention groups.
Abstract
Occupational cancer and acute cardiac events are the leading causes of death among firefighters. Increased exposure to toxicants on the fire ground, such as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, benzene, and per- and poly-fluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), has been linked to certain cancers, cardiovascular disease, accelerated epigenetic aging, and other adverse health effects. PFAS are a major concern because they are persistent, can bioaccumulate, and are present in several firefighting tools. Compared to the general population, firefighters have elevated serum levels of some types of PFAS. A randomized clinical trial in Australian firefighters found that routine blood and plasma donation for 1 year led to decreased serum PFAS levels, although health outcomes were not directly measured in that study. In collaboration with fire service leadership in Arizona, the Firefighter Collaborative…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOccupational Health and Performance · Birth, Development, and Health · High Altitude and Hypoxia
