Evaluates the carcinogenic risk to humans posed by exposure to selected
flame retardants and other chemicals used in the textile manufacturing
industry. Agents were selected for evaluation on the basis of the
availability of data on carcinogenicity and on human exposure. The book
also includes an extensive monograph addressing the question of whether
employment in the textile manufacturing industry exposes workers to
carcinogenic risks.
Monographs cover six flame retardants (chlorendic acid, chlorinated
paraffins, decabromodiphenyl oxide, dimethyl hydrogen phosphite,
tetrakis(hydroxymethyl) phosphonium salts, and tris(2-chloroethyl)
phosphate), five textile dyes (para-chloro-ortho-toluidine and its
strong acid salts, Disperse Blue 1, Disperse Yellow 3, Vat Yellow 4, and
5-nitro-ortho-toluidine) and nitrilotriacetic acid and its salts.
Para-chloro-ortho-toluidine and its strong acid salts were
classified as probably carcinogenic to humans; and chlorendic acid
chlorinated paraffins, Disperse Blue 1, and nitrilotriacetic acid and
its salts were classified as possibly carcinogenic to humans. The
remaining chemicals could not be classified.
The most extensive monograph evaluates occupational exposures in the
textile manufacturing industry. Evaluations of risk concentrate on
epidemiological evidence of carcinogenicity at the oral and pharyngeal
oesophagus and stomach, nasal cavity, larynx, lung, and bladder sites.
In view of the strength of findings of bladder cancer among dyers and
among weavers and of cancer of the nasal cavity among weavers and other
textile workers, the monograph concludes that working in the textile
manufacturing industry entails exposures that are possibly carcinogenic
to humans.