Abstract

Although chronic exposure to high doses of trichloroethene causes tumors of the lung, liver, and kidney in experimental animals, the epidemiology data in humans exposed to trichloroethene as a whole fail to support a causal association between trichloroethene exposure and cancers of the lungs, liver, or kidneys in humans at environmentally relevant concentrations. Environmentally relevant concentrations of trichloroethene are defined as 50 ppb (50 µg/L) in water or 5 ppb (27 µg/m3) in air. Tumor induction by trichloroethene in rodents exposed to very high doses over their whole lifespan has been observed in the kidney of rats and in the lung and liver of mice. Mechanistic data demonstrate that species-specific processes are involved in the carcinogenicity associated with chronic trichloroethene exposure in rodents. Based on these data and the results of recent well-conducted epidemiology studies, it can be concluded that humans exposed to trichloroethene at environmentally relevant concentrations are not at an increased risk for developing cancer.

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