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Human Health Effects of Trichloroethylene: Key Findings and Scientific Issues
Authors:Weihsueh A. Chiu  Jennifer Jinot  Cheryl Siegel Scott  Susan L. Makris  Glinda S. Cooper  Rebecca C. Dzubow  Ambuja S. Bale  Marina V. Evans  Kathryn Z. Guyton  Nagalakshmi Keshava  John C. Lipscomb  Stanley Barone  Jr.   John F. Fox  Maureen R. Gwinn  John Schaum  Jane C. Caldwell
Affiliation:1National Center for Environmental Assessment, and;2Office of Children’s Health Protection, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Washington, DC, USA;3National Health and Environmental Effects Research Laboratory, U.S. EPA, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina, USA;4Office of Pollution Prevention and Toxics, U.S. EPA, Washington, DC, USA;5U.S. EPA, Washington, DC, USA (Retired)
Abstract:
Background: In support of the Integrated Risk Information System (IRIS), the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) completed a toxicological review of trichloroethylene (TCE) in September 2011, which was the result of an effort spanning > 20 years.Objectives: We summarized the key findings and scientific issues regarding the human health effects of TCE in the U.S. EPA’s toxicological review.Methods: In this assessment we synthesized and characterized thousands of epidemiologic, experimental animal, and mechanistic studies, and addressed several key scientific issues through modeling of TCE toxicokinetics, meta-analyses of epidemiologic studies, and analyses of mechanistic data.Discussion: Toxicokinetic modeling aided in characterizing the toxicological role of the complex metabolism and multiple metabolites of TCE. Meta-analyses of the epidemiologic data strongly supported the conclusions that TCE causes kidney cancer in humans and that TCE may also cause liver cancer and non-Hodgkin lymphoma. Mechanistic analyses support a key role for mutagenicity in TCE-induced kidney carcinogenicity. Recent evidence from studies in both humans and experimental animals point to the involvement of TCE exposure in autoimmune disease and hypersensitivity. Recent avian and in vitro mechanistic studies provided biological plausibility that TCE plays a role in developmental cardiac toxicity, the subject of substantial debate due to mixed results from epidemiologic and rodent studies.Conclusions: TCE is carcinogenic to humans by all routes of exposure and poses a potential human health hazard for noncancer toxicity to the central nervous system, kidney, liver, immune system, male reproductive system, and the developing embryo/fetus.
Keywords:assessment   cancer/tumors   cardiovascular   epidemiology   immunologic response   Integrated Risk Information System (IRIS)   meta-analysis   mode of action   physiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) modeling   trichloroethylene
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