VA Dives into PFAS Poison and Veteran Cancer Claims
Published Date: 12/18/2025
Notice
Summary
The VA heard from veterans and the public about how exposure to PFAS chemicals might be linked to kidney cancer. They’re carefully reviewing all the science and past claims to decide if kidney cancer should be officially recognized as a service-related condition, which could speed up benefits for affected veterans. This process is ongoing, with no changes yet, but it’s a big step toward helping those who served and were exposed.
Analyzed Economic Effects
7 provisions identified: 4 benefits, 3 costs, 0 mixed.
Assessment May Lead to Presumptive Benefits
The VA is conducting a scientific assessment of whether exposure to PFAS chemicals is linked to kidney cancer. If the assessment leads to a formal evaluation and a positive finding, VA could establish kidney cancer as a presumptive service‑connected condition, which would affect veterans who had PFAS exposure during service.
Current Review Limited to Kidney Cancer
For this scientific assessment VA will focus only on the possible relationship between PFAS exposure and kidney cancer. Other health conditions potentially linked to PFAS exposure may be considered in future assessments, but they are not part of the current review.
VA Does Not Offer PFAS Blood Testing
The VA currently does not provide PFAS blood testing because such tests do not determine timing, source, or clinical impact of exposure. Veterans who want PFAS blood testing may obtain it through private laboratories outside the VA health care system.
Fort McClellan Study Covers 1935–1999 Service Dates
Section 801 of the PACT Act requires an epidemiological study of veterans who served at Fort McClellan, Alabama, between January 1, 1935, and May 20, 1999, and VA is conducting that research and will publish results when complete. Veterans who served at Fort McClellan during those dates are included in this mandated study.
Assessment Will Include Military PFAS Exposure Types
VA says the scientific assessment will examine peer‑reviewed studies that include PFAS compounds and exposure routes specific to military settings, such as firefighting foams and other known military uses. Studies from any population reporting on PFAS and kidney cancer will be considered to allow a broad review.
No PFAS Registry; VA Will Use Epidemiologic Studies
VA will not create a self‑reported PFAS registry because VA considers such registries to have limited scientific value. Instead, VA is conducting epidemiologic studies to improve understanding of PFAS impacts in military populations.
Ongoing Opportunities for Public Input and Updates
VA will provide status updates at PACT Act Quarterly Briefings and will publish an annual FY2025 notice and hold a listening session to collect input from veterans, VSOs, and stakeholders. These venues offer veterans and stakeholders opportunities to give information that VA will include in the scientific assessment.
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