Microscopic illustration of prostate tumor tissue containing higher levels of microplastics than nearby benign tissue, from NYU pilot study.
Microscopic illustration of prostate tumor tissue containing higher levels of microplastics than nearby benign tissue, from NYU pilot study.
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Pilot study finds microplastics in most prostate tumor samples, with higher levels than nearby benign tissue

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An Binciki Gaskiya

Researchers at NYU Langone Health reported detecting microplastics in prostate tumor tissue from a small group of men undergoing prostate removal surgery, with average concentrations about 2.5 times higher in tumor samples than in nearby noncancerous tissue. The team says the findings, scheduled for presentation Feb. 26, 2026, at the American Society of Clinical Oncology’s Genitourinary Cancers Symposium, add early evidence that microplastic exposure could be relevant to prostate cancer but do not establish cause and effect.

Researchers from NYU Langone Health, including the Perlmutter Cancer Center and the Center for the Investigation of Environmental Hazards, analyzed prostate tissue from 10 patients treated with surgery to remove the prostate gland.

In the tumor samples, the team detected plastic particles in 9 of 10 cases (90%). In noncancerous prostate tissue samples, plastic particles were found in 7 of 10 cases (70%). On average, the researchers reported about 40 micrograms of plastic per gram of tumor tissue, compared with about 16 micrograms per gram in the benign tissue—roughly a 2.5-fold difference.

“Our pilot study provides important evidence that microplastic exposure may be a risk factor for prostate cancer,” said study lead author Stacy Loeb, MD, a professor in NYU Grossman School of Medicine’s Departments of Urology and Population Health.

The results are slated to be presented on February 26, 2026, at the American Society of Clinical Oncology’s Genitourinary Cancers Symposium. Loeb and colleagues described the work as the first Western study to directly measure microplastic levels in prostate tumors and compare them with levels in noncancerous prostate tissue.

Microplastics are tiny plastic fragments that can form as consumer plastics—such as those used in food packaging, cosmetics, and other everyday products—break down. Researchers said such particles can enter the body through food, inhalation, or skin contact, and prior studies have detected them in many human organs and bodily fluids, though health effects are still being investigated.

To reduce the risk of contaminating samples during analysis, the research team said it substituted common plastic lab materials with alternatives such as aluminum and cotton and performed testing in controlled clean-room conditions. The investigators focused their measurements on 12 common plastic molecules and used specialized instruments to assess the amount and characteristics of plastic particles in the tissue.

“By uncovering yet another potential health concern posed by plastic, our findings highlight the need for stricter regulatory measures to limit the public’s exposure to these substances, which are everywhere in the environment,” said senior author Vittorio Albergamo, PhD, an assistant professor in NYU Grossman School of Medicine’s Department of Pediatrics.

The researchers said a possible next step is to examine whether microplastics could contribute to chronic inflammation in prostate tissue—an immune response that, over time, can damage cells and lead to genetic changes associated with cancer. They cautioned that the study’s small size means larger research efforts are needed to confirm the findings and better understand any relationship to cancer development.

Prostate cancer is commonly diagnosed among men in the United States; the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that about one in eight U.S. men will be diagnosed during their lifetime. NYU Langone said the research was funded by the U.S. Department of Defense and included collaborators across NYU Langone as well as Samir Taneja, MD, of Northwell Health in New York City.

Abin da mutane ke faɗa

Reactions on X to the NYU Langone pilot study show widespread concern over microplastics found in 90% of prostate tumor samples at 2.5 times higher concentrations than benign tissue. Lead researchers present it as provocative early evidence warranting more study without claiming causation. Users and health professionals express alarm about plastic pollution's health impacts, call for reduced exposure, and note the need for larger trials amid small sample caveats.

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Realistic depiction of pesticide spraying in rural Peru, with heatmap showing elevated cancer risk in high-exposure Indigenous communities.
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Study maps pesticide mixtures in Peru and finds higher cancer risk in high-exposure areas

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A study published in *Nature Health* reports a statistical link between environmental exposure to mixtures of agricultural pesticides and higher cancer risk in Peru. Using modeled pesticide dispersion from 2014 to 2019 and cancer registry data from 2007 to 2020 covering more than 150,000 cases, researchers found that people living in high-exposure areas faced, on average, about a 150% higher likelihood of cancer, with Indigenous and rural farming communities among those most exposed.

Researchers at the University of Michigan have discovered that common nitrile and latex lab gloves release particles resembling microplastics, potentially inflating pollution estimates. The study, led by Madeline Clough and Anne McNeil, traced contamination to stearates in the gloves during sample preparation. Switching to cleanroom gloves could reduce false positives significantly.

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Researchers at the University of Vienna have determined that land releases more than 20 times as many microplastic particles into the atmosphere as the oceans, challenging prior assumptions. Their study, published in Nature, used global measurements to correct overestimated emission models. The findings highlight land as the dominant source, though uncertainties persist.

Male rats exposed to a common plastic chemical early in life displayed higher anxiety levels as adults, researchers reported at a major medical meeting.

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