Tungsten toxicity and carcinogenesis
- PMID: 36858771
- PMCID: PMC11003356
- DOI: 10.1016/bs.apha.2022.10.004
Tungsten toxicity and carcinogenesis
Abstract
Tungsten is an emerging contaminant in the environment. Research has demonstrated that humans are exposed to high levels of tungsten in certain settings, primarily due to increased use of tungsten in industrial applications. However, our understanding of the potential human health risks of tungsten exposure is still limited. An important point we have learned about the toxicity profile of tungsten is that it is complex because tungsten can often augment the effects of other co-exposures or co-stressors, which could result in greater toxicity or more severe disease. This has shaped the tungsten toxicology field and the types of research questions being investigated. This has particularly been true when evaluating the toxicity profile of tungsten metal alloys in combination with cobalt. In this chapter, the current state of the tungsten toxicology field will be discussed focusing on data investigating tungsten carcinogenicity and other major toxicities including pulmonary, cardiometabolic, bone, and immune endpoints, either alone or in combination with other metals. Environmental and human monitoring data will also be discussed to highlight human populations most at risk of exposure to high concentrations of tungsten, the forms of tungsten present in each setting, and exposure levels in each population.
Keywords: Biomonitoring; Bone; Carcinogenesis; Metal; Toxicity; Tumorigenesis; Tungsten.
Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
Conflict of interest The author declares no conflicts of interest. All data reported in the present book chapter are from public scientific literature.
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