Abstract

The toxicity and carcinogenicity of chlorinated paraffins containing C12 with 60% Cl, and C23 with 43% Cl, were assessed in prechronic and 2-year gavage studies using F344 N rats and B6C3F1 mice of both sexes. Single administrations of chlorinated paraffins were nonlethal in rats and mice, but repeated-dose and 2-year studies demonstrated toxic responses that differed with the paraffins. The C23,Cl43% paraffin produced a granulomatous inflammation in the liver of female rats in 13-week studies, while the C12,Cl60% paraffin caused deaths of rats and mice in 16-day studies and marked liver enlargement in 13-week studies. In 2-year studies, the C23,Cl43% paraffin caused hepatic and lymphatic granulomatous inflammation and hyperplasia in both sexes of rats, and was associated with marginal increases in adrenal medullary pheochromocytomas in female rats and hepatocellular neoplasms in female mice and with clear increases in malignant lymphomas in male mice. The C12,Cl60% paraffin caused marked liver enlargement in rats and increased the severity of nephropathy in male rats and the incidence of nephropathy in female rats. C12,Cl60% also caused hepatocellular neoplasms in both sexes of rats and mice: kidney tubular cell adenomas and adenocarcinomas in male rats, thyroid follicular cell neoplasms in female rats and female mice, and a marginal increase in mononuclear cell leukemia in male rats. Thus, the short-chain, heavily chlorinated paraffin appears to have a greater potential for chronic toxicity and carcinogenicity than the longer-chain, lightly chlorinated paraffin. Both paraffins have been reported to be nonmutagenic in bacteria. (National Toxicology Program (1986) Technical Report, NIH Publications 86-2561 and 86-2564).

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