A case of Bowen's disease and small-cell lung carcinoma: Long-term consequences of chronic arsenic exposure in Chinese traditional medicine

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Abstract

Chronic arsenic toxicity occurs primarily through inadvertent ingestion of contaminated water and food or occupational exposure, but it can also occur through medicinal ingestion. This case features a 53-year-old lifetime nonsmoker with chronic asthma treated for 10 years in childhood with Chinese traditional medicine containing arsenic. The patient was diagnosed with Bowen's disease and development extensive-stage small-cell carcinoma of the lung 10 years and 47 years, respectively, after the onset of arsenic exposure. Although it has a long history as a medicinal agent, arsenic is a carcinogen associated with amny malignancies including those of skin and lung. It is more commonly associated with non-small-cell lung cancer, but the temporal associated with Bowen's disease in the absence of other chemical or occupational exposure strongly points to a causal role for arsenic in this case of small-cell lung cancer. Individuals with documented arseni-induced Bowen's disease should be considered for more aggressive screening for long-term complications, especially the development of subsequent malignancies.

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APA

Lee, L., & Bebb, G. (2005). A case of Bowen’s disease and small-cell lung carcinoma: Long-term consequences of chronic arsenic exposure in Chinese traditional medicine. Environmental Health Perspectives, 113(2), 207–210. https://doi.org/10.1289/ehp.7200

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