Hext Paul M, Tomenson John A, Thompson Peter
Syngenta Central Toxicology Laboratory, Alderley Park, Macclesfield, Cheshire SK10 4TJ, UK.
Ann Occup Hyg. 2005 Aug;49(6):461-72. doi: 10.1093/annhyg/mei012. Epub 2005 Mar 24.
Titanium dioxide (TiO(2)) is manufactured worldwide in large quantities for use in a wide range of applications and is normally considered to be toxicologically inert. Findings of tumours in the lungs of rats exposed chronically to high concentrations of TiO(2), but not in similarly exposed mice or hamsters, suggest that the tumorigenic response may be a rat-specific phenomenon but nonetheless raises concerns for potential human health effects. With the limited toxicological understanding of species differences in response to inhaled TiO(2) and a similarly limited amount of epidemiological information with respect to TiO(2) exposure in the workplace, a consortium of TiO(2) manufacturers in Europe (under the European Chemistry Industry Council; CEFIC) and in North America (under the American Chemistry Council; ACC) initiated a programme of research to investigate inter-species differences as a result of exposure to TiO(2) and to conduct detailed epidemiological surveys of the major manufacturing sites. The toxicology studies exposed rats, mice and hamsters to pigment-grade TiO(2) (PG-TiO(2), 0, 10, 50 and 250 mg m(-3)) or ultrafine TiO(2) (UF-TiO(2), 0, 0.5, 2 and 10 mg m(-3)) for 90 days and the lung burdens and tissue responses were evaluated at the end of the exposure period and for up to 1 year after exposure. Results demonstrated clear species differences. Rats and mice had similar lung burdens and clearance rates while hamsters showed high clearance rates. At high lung particle burdens, rats showed a marked progression of histopathological lesions throughout the post-exposure period while mice and hamsters showed minimal initial lesions with recovery apparent during the post-exposure period. Lung neutrophil responses, a sensitive marker of inflammatory changes, reflected the development or recovery of the histopathological lesions. The use of surface area rather than gravimetric lung burden provided closer correlates of the burden to the biological effect across both TiO(2) types. The epidemiological investigations evaluated the mortality statistics at 11 European and 4 US TiO(2) manufacturing plants. They concluded that there was no suggestion of any carcinogenic effect associated with workplace exposure to TiO(2).
二氧化钛(TiO₂)在全球范围内大量生产,用于广泛的应用领域,通常被认为在毒理学上是惰性的。长期暴露于高浓度TiO₂的大鼠肺部发现了肿瘤,但在同样暴露的小鼠或仓鼠中未发现,这表明致癌反应可能是大鼠特有的现象,但仍引发了对潜在人类健康影响的担忧。由于对吸入TiO₂的物种差异的毒理学了解有限,以及关于工作场所TiO₂暴露的流行病学信息同样有限,欧洲(在欧洲化学工业理事会;CEFIC)和北美的TiO₂制造商联盟(在美国化学理事会;ACC)发起了一项研究计划,以调查暴露于TiO₂后的物种间差异,并对主要生产场所进行详细的流行病学调查。毒理学研究将大鼠、小鼠和仓鼠暴露于颜料级TiO₂(PG-TiO₂,0、10、50和250 mg m⁻³)或超细TiO₂(UF-TiO₂,0、0.5、2和10 mg m⁻³)中90天,并在暴露期结束时以及暴露后长达1年评估肺部负荷和组织反应。结果显示出明显的物种差异。大鼠和小鼠的肺部负荷和清除率相似,而仓鼠显示出高清除率。在高肺部颗粒负荷下,大鼠在整个暴露后期组织病理学病变有明显进展,而小鼠和仓鼠最初病变最小,在暴露后期明显恢复。肺部中性粒细胞反应是炎症变化的敏感标志物,反映了组织病理学病变的发展或恢复。使用表面积而非重量肺部负荷能更紧密地将两种TiO₂类型的负荷与生物学效应联系起来。流行病学调查评估了11家欧洲和4家美国TiO₂生产工厂的死亡率统计数据。他们得出结论,没有迹象表明工作场所暴露于TiO₂会有任何致癌作用。