AI Article Synopsis

  • Ingestion of inorganic arsenic in drinking water at high levels is linked to bladder cancer, but the connection at lower concentrations seen in the U.S. is less clear.
  • The study aimed to assess arsenic levels in drinking water for over 2,600 participants to understand long-term exposure and its potential health effects.
  • The researchers used various methods to estimate arsenic concentrations, successfully covering a large portion of the participants' lifetime exposure and validating their findings against existing data.

Article Abstract

Background: Ingestion of inorganic arsenic in drinking water is recognized as a cause of bladder cancer when levels are relatively high (≥ 150 µg/L). The epidemiologic evidence is less clear at the low-to-moderate concentrations typically observed in the United States. Accurate retrospective exposure assessment over a long time period is a major challenge in conducting epidemiologic studies of environmental factors and diseases with long latency, such as cancer.

Objective: We estimated arsenic concentrations in the water supplies of 2,611 participants in a population-based case-control study in northern New England.

Methods: Estimates covered the lifetimes of most study participants and were based on a combination of arsenic measurements at the homes of the participants and statistical modeling of arsenic concentrations in the water supply of both past and current homes. We assigned a residential water supply arsenic concentration for 165,138 (95%) of the total 173,361 lifetime exposure years (EYs) and a workplace water supply arsenic level for 85,195 EYs (86% of reported occupational years).

Results: Three methods accounted for 93% of the residential estimates of arsenic concentration: direct measurement of water samples (27%; median, 0.3 µg/L; range, 0.1-11.5), statistical models of water utility measurement data (49%; median, 0.4 µg/L; range, 0.3-3.3), and statistical models of arsenic concentrations in wells using aquifers in New England (17%; median, 1.6 µg/L; range, 0.6-22.4).

Conclusions: We used a different validation procedure for each of the three methods, and found our estimated levels to be comparable with available measured concentrations. This methodology allowed us to calculate potential drinking water exposure over long periods.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3230387PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1289/ehp.1002345DOI Listing

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