|
A new pool water study is being misrepresented in some media
reports as linking swimming in treated pools to a
potential cancer risk. This suggested link is not backed by the research,
according to an evaluation by the U.K. National
Health Service (NHS).
To understand the issue, we must separate facts (those items
accepted by scientists as proven
to be true) and hypotheses
(those items suggested as possibly
being true but which remain unproven by scientific investigations).
- FACT:
In properly managed pools, chlorinated swimming pool disinfectants help
destroy waterborne germs that can cause
diarrhea, swimmers’ ear and skin infections.
- HYPOTHESIS:
Chemical byproducts of disinfection may affect human
health.
- FACT:
Chemical byproducts of disinfection are formed when
disinfectants react with organic compounds (e.g., urine, perspiration,
perfumes, cosmetics, etc.) in swimming pools. The amount of disinfection
byproducts formed is directly related to the quality of pool management.
For example, chloramines, which can cause eye and skin irritation, are
formed when nitrogen-containing compounds in urine and perspiration,
etc. combine with chlorine.
In the new study, researchers concentrated
disinfection byproducts from swimming pools, exposed mammalian (hamster
ovary) cells to these concentrated disinfection byproducts and measured
the resultant genotoxicity (i.e. damage or mutation to DNA). The
authors examined pool and spa waters derived from a common tap water
source, but treated using different water disinfectants and under
different chemical conditions.
The study data reported by the authors demonstrate
that every variable
tested (i.e. type of disinfectant, amount of light, water
temperature) produced
more DNA damage to hamster ovary cells than tap water
(which was the source water use for the pools and spas). The authors:
- STATE
that “…disinfection of recreational pools is essential to prevent
outbreaks of infectious disease.”
- SUGGEST
that “…brominating agents should be avoided…in recreational pools…” and
“…combining UV treatment with chlorine may be beneficial compared to
chlorine alone.”
- The
difference between what is STATED and what is SUGGESTED is the strength
of the supporting scientific data.
In
spite of cautions by the NHS and the study authors themselves regarding
the limited meaning of these study results, some media
reports have ignored these cautions and have ‘cherry-picked’ the
information until all that is left is fear-mongering, a saleable
commodity. These study related cautions, ignored by the media, put the
results into the correct perspective and include:
- The
test (of genotoxicity) is one employed as an ‘early screen
or prescreen’ because it is easy and inexpensive to perform (its
advantages). Its disadvantages are a) that its predictive validity to man (i.e.
whether the results of the test have any meaning to predicting what
might happen in man) is relatively unknown (this test is NOT accepted
as definitive by either the FDA or EPA) and b) the test produces highly
variable results in laboratories that do not routinely perform the
assay (in other words, those labs that don’t normally do the test are
expected to produce variable results)
- The
materials tested (disinfection by products) were highly concentrated
prior to testing. Whether
the results obtained from tests using these enormous and non-natural
levels of disinfection byproducts have any relationship to what might
happen in a pool situation is outside the realm of current scientific
knowledge.
- The
number of pools/spas evaluated in the study was very small making the
data generated in this study inadequate for use in
definitive human risk evaluation
- The
NHS states: “This particular study did not directly examine [a link
between chlorinated swimming pool water and a greater risk of cancer]
or look at any other particular health outcomes in people…future
research is needed to examine the genotoxicity of swimming pool water
and its relationship with pool disinfectants, the environment and other
particulates that are thrown into the mix, such as sun lotions and
urine.”
The scientific ‘bottom-line’ at this point in time
is:
Medical experts agree that swimming is an excellent form of
exercise for people of all ages and the World Health
Organization stated that it is important to consider the benefits of aerobic
exercise and the proven significantly decreased health risks for
infectious disease in a properly chlorinated pool versus the
hypothesized and small potential risks from chlorinated byproducts.
For more information on Healthy Pools, please see www.healthypools.org.
(Bruce Bernard, Ph., is the Associate
Editor of the Journal of Toxicology and a member of the Water
Quality and Health Council.)
|