Community Level Results: El Paso County, Colorado

Key points

In 2019, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR) started exposure assessments (EAs) in communities near current or former military bases known to have had per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) in their drinking water.

El Paso County near Peterson Air Force Base

Information to protect our communities

Individuals who participated in the EAs provided blood and urine samples to CDC/ATSDR for analysis. We sent letters to participants with their individual lab results. See the sample letter of the test results.

PFAS EA participation El Paso County, CO. 318 adults and 28 children from 188 households
Blood and urine samples were collected as part of the EA.

Additional information is also being reviewed to better understand the community's exposure. This includes age and location. Once our full analysis is complete, CDC/ATSDR will host an in-person community meeting to share our findings and recommendations.

The El Paso County, CO EA site focused on an area near Reese Technology Center. For more information, refer to the map of the sampling area.

PFAS in blood

Did you know...

Since 1999, the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) has measured PFAS levels in blood in the U.S. population. Most people in the United States have been exposed to PFAS and have PFAS in their blood.

The lab tested participants' blood for seven different PFAS. PFAS levels are measured in micrograms per liter (µg /L).

CDC/ATSDR compared the levels of PFAS in participant's blood across the community to the levels found in the U.S. population. Two PFAS, PFHxS and PFOA) were detected above national averages. The levels of MeFOSAA, PFOA, PFUna, PFNA, and PFDA were similar to or below national averages.

PFAS levels. National average vs. El Paso County CO, near Peterson AFB. PHFxS 10.6 vs 1.2. PFOS 6.2 vs 4.7. PFOA 2.1 vs 1.6. PFNA .3 vs .6. PFDA .1 vs .2.
These numbers compare levels of PFAS of participants versus the national average
The percentage of participants with elevated levels in El Paso County. PFHxS 96%. PFOA 69%. PFOS 65%. PFDA 33%. PFNA 18%.
The percentage of participants with PFAS levels above the national average.

PFAS levels in blood compared to other studies**

U.S. population, exposed community, occupational exposure, New Castle County.
Legend
El Paso County CO references
References
PFOS levels. National level (NHANES 2015/16) 4.7. El Paso County 6.2. Other testing locations ranged 941 to 6.6.
PFOS levels in blood compared to other studies.
PFHxS levels. National average (NHANES 2015/16) 1.2. El Paso County 10.6. Other testing locations ranged 180 to 2.1.
PFHxS levels in blood compared to other studies.
PFOA levels. National average (NHANES 2015/16) 1.6. El Paso County 2.1. Other testing locations ranged 899 to 1.5.
PFOA levels in blood compared to other studies

Other PFAS levels

Urine

All participants provided a urine sample but only a subset was analyzed. This is due to the laboratory method to detect PFAS in urine still being refined.

In the samples analyzed by the laboratory, PFAS was found in less than 3% at a low concentration. Therefore, ATSDR did not analyze the rest of the urine samples for PFAS. The average levels of PFAS in urine could not be calculated due to the small number of detections.

Tap water

CDC/ATSDR collected and tested tap water samples from some participating households. PFAS levels for all 18 tap water samples were below all federal and applicable state guidelines for PFAS in drinking water.

The drinking water systems of Security Water District, Security Mobile Home Park, and the western portion of the Widefield Water and Sanitation District have taken action to reduce PFAS exposure to customers. Based on the information ATSDR has reviewed, the drinking water supplies currently meet all federal guidelines and Colorado state standards for PFAS. ATSDR does not recommend community members use alternative sources of water.

Dust

CDC/ATSDR collected and analyzed indoor dust samples from 18 participating households. CDC/ATSDR is evaluating the dust sample results and will have more information in the final report.

About the results

For more information

Visit www.atsdr.cdc.gov/pfas, or contact:
Chris Maniglier-Poulet | ATSDR Region 8
cgp8@cdc.gov | (303) 312-7013

CDC/ATSDR is evaluating data collected from the PFAS EA to better understand exposure in the community. This measures PFAS levels in people's bodies but is unable to identify health effects associated with these levels of exposure. We are working to better understand health effects from PFAS exposure through the Multi-site Health Study.

We are also reaching out to doctors, nurses, and other health care providers in the El Paso County, CO area to provide PFAS information.