Authors
Allan H Smith, Claudia Hopenhayn-Rich, Michael N Bates, Helen M Goeden, Irva Hertz-Picciotto, Heather M Duggan, Rose Wood, Michael J Kosnett, Martyn T Smith
Publication date
1992/7
Source
Environmental health perspectives
Volume
97
Pages
259-267
Description
Ingestion of arsenic, both from water supplies and medicinal preparations, is known to cause skin cancer. The evidence assessed here indicates that arsenic can also cause liver, lung, kidney, and bladder cancer and that the population cancer risks due to arsenic in U.S. water supplies may be comparable to those from environmental tobacco smoke and radon in homes. Large population studies in an area of Taiwan with high arsenic levels in well water (170-800 micrograms/L) were used to establish dose-response relationships between cancer risks and the concentration of inorganic arsenic naturally present in water supplies. It was estimated that at the current EPA standard of 50 micrograms/L, the lifetime risk of dying from cancer of the liver, lung, kidney, or bladder from drinking 1 L/day of water could be as high as 13 per 1000 persons. It has been estimated that more than 350,000 people in the United States …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
AH Smith, C Hopenhayn-Rich, MN Bates, HM Goeden… - Environmental health perspectives, 1992