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Arsenic in drinking water and urinary tract cancers: a systematic review of 30 years of epidemiological evidence

期刊

ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH
卷 13, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/1476-069X-13-44

关键词

Arsenic; Drinking water; Bladder; Kidney; Urinary tract; Cancer risk; Systematic review; Meta-analysis

资金

  1. Canadian Cancer Society
  2. Nova Scotia Health Research Foundation
  3. Canadian Institute for Health Research

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Background: Arsenic in drinking water is a public health issue affecting hundreds of millions of people worldwide. This review summarizes 30 years of epidemiological studies on arsenic exposure in drinking water and the risk of bladder or kidney cancer, quantifying these risks using a meta-analytical framework. Methods: Forty studies met the selection criteria. Seventeen provided point estimates of arsenic concentrations in drinking water and were used in a meta-analysis of bladder cancer incidence (7 studies) and mortality (10 studies) and kidney cancer mortality (2 studies). Risk estimates for incidence and mortality were analyzed separately using Generalized Linear Models. Predicted risks for bladder cancer incidence were estimated at 10, 50 and 150 mu g/L arsenic in drinking water. Bootstrap randomizations were used to assess robustness of effect size. Results: Twenty-eight studies observed an association between arsenic in drinking water and bladder cancer. Ten studies showed an association with kidney cancer, although of lower magnitude than that for bladder cancer. The meta-analyses showed the predicted risks for bladder cancer incidence were 2.7 [1.2-4.1]; 4.2 [2.1-6.3] and; 5.8 [2.9-8.7] for drinking water arsenic levels of 10, 50, and 150 mu g/L, respectively. Bootstrapped randomizations confirmed this increased risk, but, lowering the effect size to 1.4 [0.35-4.0], 2.3 [0.59-6.4], and 3.1 [0.80-8.9]. The latter suggests that with exposures to 50 mu g/L, there was an 83% probability for elevated incidence of bladder cancer; and a 74% probability for elevated mortality. For both bladder and kidney cancers, mortality rates at 150 mu g/L were about 30% greater than those at 10 mu g/L. Conclusion: Arsenic in drinking water is associated with an increased risk of bladder and kidney cancers, although at lower levels (<150 mu g/L), there is uncertainty due to the increased likelihood of exposure misclassification at the lower end of the exposure curve. Meta-analyses suggest exposure to 10 mu g/L of arsenic in drinking water may double the risk of bladder cancer, or at the very least, increase it by about 40%. With the large number of people exposed to these arsenic concentrations worldwide the public health consequences of arsenic in drinking water are substantial.

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