Logo image
Cropland associated with risk of Parkinson's disease in the northern Great Plains
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Cropland associated with risk of Parkinson's disease in the northern Great Plains

Brittany Krzyzanowski, Kassu M. Beyene, Susan Searles Nielsen, Jordan A. Killion and Brad A. Racette
Parkinsonism & related disorders, Vol.132, p.107288
03/2025
PMID: 39855059

Abstract

Cropland density Environmental Epidemiology Geographic Parkinson PM2.5
We sought to identify regional associations between cropland density and crop types and PD in the U.S. We conducted a population-based study of 21,639,190 Medicare beneficiaries, 89,790 with incident PD in 2009. We used county-level geographic weighted regression (GWR) to identify region(s) of the U.S. where the association between PD RR and cropland density was strongest. In a broad region identified by GWR in which cropland density was associated with PD, we performed logistic regression using individual-level beneficiary data (2733 cases and 805,984 non-cases) with high-resolution cropland density data. We adjusted for age, sex, race, smoking, healthcare utilization, and PM2.5 (particulate matter <2.5 μm). We then explored PD-cropland associations for each type of crop within a subregion, in which the association was the strongest. GWR identified a 9-state region in the Great Plains in which county-level cropland density and PD RR were associated. Within this region, the strongest GWR coefficients centered around the Williston Basin. High-resolution analysis demonstrated an association between cropland density within a 5-mile radius of residential zip+4 and PD. When comparing the highest to lowest quartile of cropland density, the odds ratio (OR) for PD was 1.14 (95 % confidence interval [CI] 1.01–1.27) in the 9-state region and 1.99 (95 % CI 1.09–3.61) in the Williston Basin. In the Williston Basin, percentage of sunflowers, winter wheat, and alfalfa within 5 miles of a beneficiary's zip+4 was associated with PD. We identified a region-specific association between cropland and crop type and PD in the Williston Basin. •Cropland density and Parkinson disease are associated in the Great Plains Region.•The cropland density-Parkinson association was strongest in the Williston Basin.•Cropland density within five miles of residential zip+4 was associated with Parkinson disease.•Pesticides applied to sunflowers, winter wheat, and alfalfa are of interest.

Metrics

1 Record Views

Details

Logo image