TY - JOUR
T1 - Does arsenic exposure increase the risk for prostate cancer?
AU - Yang, Chun Yuh
AU - Chang, Chih Ching
AU - Chiu, Hui Fen
N1 - Funding Information:
Received 15 June 2008; accepted 24 July 2008. This study was partly supported by a grant from the National Science Council, Executive Yuan, Taiwan (NSC-96-2628-B-037-039). Address correspondence to Chun-Yuh Yang, PhD, MPH, Faculty of Public Health, College of Health Sciences, Kaohsiung Medical University, 100 Shih-Chuan 1st RD, Kaohsiung, Taiwan 80708. E-mail: [email protected] almost completely supplied with municipal water between 1966 and 1975 (Tseng, 1989). Artesian well water was thus no longer used for drinking and cooking after the mid-1970s. This provided us with an unique opportunity to examine whether the mortality rates associated with arsenic exposure among residents living in the BFD-endemic areas might decrease following cessation from exposure to arsenic.
PY - 2008/1
Y1 - 2008/1
N2 - Arsenic has been well documented as the major risk factor for blackfoot disease (BFD), a unique peripheral vascular disease that was endemic to the southwestern coast of Taiwan, where residents consumed artesian well water containing high levels of arsenic for more than 50 yr. Chronic arsenic exposure was also reported to be associated with mortality attributed to prostate cancer in a dose-response relationship. A tap-water supply system was implemented in the early 1960s in the BFD-endemic areas in Taiwan. Artesian well water was no longer used for drinking and cooking after the mid-1970s. The objective of this study was to determine whether prostate cancer mortality decreased after the improvement of drinking-water supply system through elimination of arsenic ingestion from artesian well water. Standardized mortality ratios (SMRs) for prostate cancer were calculated for the BFD-endemic area for the years 1971-2006. Results showed that mortality attributed to prostate cancer declined gradually after the improvement of drinking-water supply system. Based on the reversibility criterion, the association between arsenic exposure and development of prostate cancer is likely to be causal.
AB - Arsenic has been well documented as the major risk factor for blackfoot disease (BFD), a unique peripheral vascular disease that was endemic to the southwestern coast of Taiwan, where residents consumed artesian well water containing high levels of arsenic for more than 50 yr. Chronic arsenic exposure was also reported to be associated with mortality attributed to prostate cancer in a dose-response relationship. A tap-water supply system was implemented in the early 1960s in the BFD-endemic areas in Taiwan. Artesian well water was no longer used for drinking and cooking after the mid-1970s. The objective of this study was to determine whether prostate cancer mortality decreased after the improvement of drinking-water supply system through elimination of arsenic ingestion from artesian well water. Standardized mortality ratios (SMRs) for prostate cancer were calculated for the BFD-endemic area for the years 1971-2006. Results showed that mortality attributed to prostate cancer declined gradually after the improvement of drinking-water supply system. Based on the reversibility criterion, the association between arsenic exposure and development of prostate cancer is likely to be causal.
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U2 - 10.1080/15287390802392065
DO - 10.1080/15287390802392065
M3 - Article
C2 - 18923998
AN - SCOPUS:54049117284
SN - 1528-7394
VL - 71
SP - 1559
EP - 1563
JO - Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health - Part A: Current Issues
JF - Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health - Part A: Current Issues
IS - 23
ER -