Carcinogenicity study of trichloroethylene, with and without epoxide stabilizers, in mice.

1984 
Previous analytical studies of industrial samples of trichloroethylene (TRI) have revealed the presence of mutageneic and carcinogenic epoxides which, it was proposed, might be responsible for the carcinogenicity of such samples, as demonstrated with mice in other laboratories. To test this hypothesis, Swiss mice (ICR/HA) of both sexes, bred and kept in SPF conditions, were dosed daily with TRI in corn oil by gavage (males: 2.4 g/kg, females: 1.8 g/kg) with or without the addition of epichlorohydrin (EPC, 0.8%, w/w), 1,2-epoxybutane (BO, 0,8%), or EPC+BO (0.25%+0,25%) for 18 months. The ensuing observation period terminated at 106 weeks (from start of experiment). Gross and microscopic examination of all organs revealed a statistically significant increase in the incidence of forestomach papillomas and carcinomas after EPC-, BO-, and (EPC+BO)-stabilized samples of TRI, but not after pure, amine base-stabilized TRI. This type of tumor is believed to be induced by the direct alkylating epoxides epichlorohydrin and epoxybutane, whose industrial use in stabilizing chlorinated aliphatic hydrocarbons should be discontinued. No other significant increase in tumor incidences was found. Again, this study does not support the suggestion that trichloroethylene itself is carcinogenic under realistic exposure conditions.
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