Ingested Arsenic and Cancer Whats New - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 34
About This Presentation
Title:

Ingested Arsenic and Cancer Whats New

Description:

Hyperkeratosis and Skin Cancer seen in other environmental areas like Bangladesh. ... Case-Control Study of Bladder Cancer and Drinking Water Arsenic in ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:78
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 35
Provided by: Mik7547
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Ingested Arsenic and Cancer Whats New


1
Ingested Arsenic and CancerWhats New?
  • For the
  • New Mexico Rural Water Association
  • March 22, 2004
  • Steven H. Lamm, MD
  • Michael B. Kruse, PhD
  • Consultants in Epidemiology Occupational
    Health, Inc. Washington, DC 202/333-2364
    Steve_at_CEOH.com

2
What is Old?
  • The NRC and EPA cancer risk assessments used the
    cancer data from SW Taiwan (bladder and lung
    cancer cases in the Blackfoot-Disease endemic
    area) to predict the cancer risk from arsenic in
    drinking water in the USA.
  • The highest risk was for bladder cancer among
    males Table ES-1.

3
What are Arsenic Health Problems?
  • SW Taiwan the most studied area
  • Blackfoot Disease
  • Skin Cancer and Hyperkeratosis
  • Bladder Cancer and Lung Cancer
  • Metabolic Syndrome (CV, DM, etc.)

4
Black-Foot Area Diseases
  • Black-foot disease was found only in parts of SW
    Taiwan.
  • Hyperkeratosis and Skin Cancer seen in other
    environmental areas like Bangladesh.

5
Studies of Health Effects of Chronic Arsenic
Exposure
Black-Foot Disease (BFD).-Unique to SW Taiwan
Linked to -drinking water sources. -arsenic in
artesian wells.
6
Effects of Arsenic Exposure
Skin Cancers on hands, arm and chest
Hyperkeratosis of the hands
7
  • Cancer Rates are expected
  • to increase linearly with dosage

8
Skin Cancer Rates
  • Based on data from 37 artesian well dependent
    villages (Tseng et al., 1968)

9
Bladder Cancer Risk(Wu et al., 1989)
10
The Regression Analysis
11
Same Data, Stratified Analysis
50
Bladder Cancer SMR
40
30
20
10
0
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
800
Arsenic Concentration at Interval Midpoint (in
mg/L)
12
  • What can explain the two different views of the
    dose-response relationship?

13
History of SW Taiwan Studies
  • Studies from 1950-1986 concerned effects from
    artesian well waters high in arsenic.
  • For the first time, in the Wu et al. (1989) paper
    the distinction of artesian wells was eliminated
    and the analysis considered arsenic alone as the
    only exposure variable.

14
Arsenic and Artesian Wells
Bladder
Standardized Mortality Ratios for Cancers by Well
Types in Village
Kidney
Skin
Lung
Liver
Artesian
Both
Colon
Shallow
0
500
1000
1500
2000
2500
3000
3500
  • Chen et al. (1985) showed relevance of
    distinction between artesian and non-artesian
    water sources.

15
Analysis by Water Source
16
New Conundrum
  • Which prediction line fits the US data?

17
Whats New?
Two studies by two separate research groups find
  • No increased bladder cancer rate with arsenic
    exposures at ? 50 ?g/L.
  • Taiwan-based estimates overpredict US experience.

18
Lets See What - 1
  • Steinmaus, Yuan, Bates, and Smith.
  • Case-Control Study of Bladder Cancer and Drinking
    Water Arsenic in Western United States. American
    Journal of Epidemiology, 2003158(12)1193-1201
  • The overall risks were below those predicted
    using data from highly exposed populations in
    Taiwan. (NRC, 1999 Morales, 2000 NRC, 2001,
    Smith, 1992)

19
Lets See What - 2
  • Lamm, Engel, Kruse, Feinleib, Byrd, Lai, and
    Wilson.
  • Arsenic in Drinking Water and Bladder Cancer
    Mortality in the U.S. An Analysis based on 133
    U.S. Counties. Journal of Occupational and
    Environmental Medicine, 2004 46(3) (pending).
  • These results provide a direct estimate of
    arsenic-related cancer risk for U.S. residents
    and exclude the National Research Councils
    2001 risk estimate.

20
Steinmaus Study
  • Case-Control Study of Bladder Cancer in
    California and Nevada 1994-2000
  • Includes Hanford, CA and Fallon, NV, the two
    largest populations in the US exposed to drinking
    water arsenic near 100 ?g/L.
  • 181 cases and 328 controls

21
Overall Odds Ratios(Steinmaus et al., 2003)
22
Summary of Steinmaus
  • No increased bladder cancer risk with increasing
    exposure to arsenic in drinking water.
  • The possible exception is for smokers who ingest
    arsenic at concentrations near 200 ug/day and is
    seen forty years after exposure.

23
  • The Lamm (2004) 133 US County Study

24
US Counties Groundwater Study(Lamm et al., 2004)
  • County Level US Data
  • Cancer Mortality Rates (NCI/EPA) 1950-79
  • Groundwater Arsenic Levels (USGS) gt 3 ?g/L
  • Groundwater Use (State DEP) 100
  • County Populations (US Census) 1960

25
Study Composition
  • 133 counties
  • 26 states
  • 2.5 million people
  • 30 years observation
  • 75 million person-years of observation
  • 4,537 bladder cancer deaths (WM)
  • Arsenic levels from 3 to 59 ?g/L
  • Groundwater source counties

26
Results US Outcome
27
Results US Outcome Data
28
Observed vs. Predicted
29
Summary of Lamm
  • No increase in bladder cancer mortality risk with
    increase of arsenic level from 3 to 59 ?g/L.
  • No special analysis for known bladder cancer risk
    factors, i.e., smoking and urbanization.

30
Observed and Predicted
31
Older US Studies
  • Bates, Smith and Cantor.
  • Case-Control Study of Bladder Cancer and Arsenic
    in Drinking Water. American Journal of
    Epidemiology, 1995141(6)532-530.
  • No association of bladder cancer with either
    measure of arsenic exposure.
  • Lewis, Southwick, Quellet-Hellstrom, Rench and
    Calderon EPA
  • Drinking Water Arsenic in Utah A Cohort
    Mortality Study. Environmental Health
    Perspectives, 1999107(5)359-365.
  • No detectable increase in the risk of bladder or
    lung cancers in the study population due to
    arsenic in drinking water, even...up to 166 ug/L
    EPA re-analysis, 2000

32
Summary
  • Four US studies, each including exposures above
    50 ?g/L, found no increased risk of bladder
    cancer with increased arsenic exposure.
  • This is consistent with the same finding in the
    Taiwan shallow aquifer villages and the recent
    Argentina case-control study (Bates et al., 2004).

33
Conclusions
  • Prior risk analyses that included the artesian
    well village data overpredict bladder cancer
    risks for the US.
  • Analyses that include inappropriate data do not
    serve as a reliable basis for establishing US
    standards.

34
  • Thank you.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com