Evaluates the carcinogenic risk to humans posed by the consumption of
chlorinated drinking-water by two chemicals used in the chlorination of
drinking-water by a number of halogenated by-products formed when
chlorine interacts with organic matter in water and by a selection of
other halogenated compounds found in drinking-water. Chlorination was
selected for evaluation because of its widespread use and because
potentially carcinogenic by-products have been measured in chlorinated
water. The book also includes a separate monograph on cobalt and cobalt
compounds.
The volume opens with a discussion of the many methodological problems
that complicate efforts to assess the carcinogenicity of chlorinated
water. Against this background the book evaluates the design and
findings of all studies relevant to the carcinogenicity assessment of
chlorinated drinking-water two chemicals (sodium chlorite and
hypochlorite salts) used in the chlorination of water eight of the
by-products most frequently measured in drinking-water and three
additional halogenated chemicals detected in drinking-water. Because of
the formidable methodological obstacles faced by all investigations only
one of these substances could be classified: bromodichloromethane was
classified as possibly carcinogenic to humans.
The final monograph considers data on metallic cobalt, cobalt alloys
including cobalt-containing surgical implants and dental devices and
cobalt compounds. In view of the strength of evidence linking cobalt
metal powder and cobalt[II] oxide to cancer in experimental animals
cobalt and cobalt compounds were classified as possibly carcinogenic to
humans.