Ambient Trichloroethylene Exposure and Parkinson Disease Risk in Medicare Beneficiaries

Document Type

Article

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Trichloroethylene (TCE) is an important environmental contaminant in the United States due to widespread use industrially. Epidemiologic studies suggest that occupational exposure to TCE and TCE-contaminated drinking water may increase the risk of Parkinson disease (PD). The aim of this study was to investigate the nationwide relationship between ambient TCE and PD risk. METHODS: We performed a nationwide, population-based, case-control study to investigate the association between incident PD in US Medicare beneficiaries aged 67 years and older in 2016-2018 and their residential exposure to ambient (outdoor) TCE in 2002. We assigned residence based on the latitude and longitude of Medicare beneficiaries' zip + 4 center 2 years before diagnosis/reference. We assigned TCE exposure based on census tract-level data from the US Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA's) National Air Toxics Assessment program. We used logistic regression to estimate relative risk (RR) adjusted for age, sex, race, smoking, health care utilization, rural-urban commuting area (RUCA), and PM. We also mapped the nationwide geospatial pattern of ambient TCE and then explored high-resolution local PD risk patterns using MapGAM for the 10-mile radius around the top 3 TCE-emitting facilities from the EPA's Toxic Release Inventory in 2002. RESULTS: We identified 221,789 incident PD cases (median age 78.8 years; 45% female) and 1,132,765 matched controls (median age 75.7 years; 57% female). We found a dose-dependent positive association between ambient TCE concentrations and PD risk, wherein beneficiaries exposed to the top decile of ambient TCE levels (0.14-8.66 μg/m) had an RR for PD of 1.10 (95% CI 1.08-1.13) compared with those exposed to the lowest decile of TCE (0.005-0.01 μg/m). We observed high levels of ambient TCE in the rust belt region of the United States and several smaller areas throughout the nation. Our MapGAM results suggested greater PD risk in the area surrounding 2 of the 3 highest ambient TCE-emitting facilities, one of which demonstrated a marked decreasing gradient of risk with increasing distance from the facility. DISCUSSION: We identified a positive association between ambient TCE and PD risk, suggesting that TCE may contribute to PD. We identified relatively higher risk of PD near 2 TCE-emitting facilities. This study was limited to Medicare-aged individuals.

Medical Subject Headings

Humans; Aged; Parkinson Disease (epidemiology); United States (epidemiology); Male; Female; Trichloroethylene (adverse effects); Medicare; Case-Control Studies; Environmental Exposure (adverse effects); Aged, 80 and over; Risk Factors

Publication Date

10-21-2025

Publication Title

Neurology

E-ISSN

1526-632X

Volume

105

Issue

8

First Page

e214174

PubMed ID

41032742

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

10.1212/WNL.0000000000214174

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