A total of 15 newly-developed
Bowen's disease patients and 34 age-sex-residence-matched controls were recruited from three arseniasis-hyperendemic villages in Taiwan to compare spontaneous and
arsenic-induced sister chromatid exchanges (SCEs), proportion of cells with high frequencies of SCEs (HFCs), and replication index (RI) in their peripheral lymphocytes.
Arsenic-induced
Bowen's disease patients were found to have significantly higher spontaneous SCEs and HFCs and a lower spontaneous RI than in matched controls without or with adjustment for age, gender, cigarette smoking, alcohol drinking,
tea drinking, status of major diseases,
HBsAg carrier status and
arsenic exposure indices through multivariate analysis.
Sodium arsenite was found to increase SCEs and HFCs and to decrease RI in a dose-response pattern for both cases and controls. The
arsenic-induced decrease in RI was significantly greater in
arsenic-induced
Bowen's disease patients than in matched controls. The
arsenic-induced increases in SCEs and HFCs were also consistently, but not statistically significantly, higher in
arsenic-induced
Bowen's disease patients than in matched controls at all
arsenite treatment levels of 0.5, 1.0 and 2.0 microM. The
arsenic-induced increase in cytogenetic damages and decrease in cell proliferation among
arsenic-induced
Bowen's disease patients compared with matched controls may result from their long-term exposure to inorganic
arsenic through consumption of high-
arsenic artesian well water, elevated individual genetic and acquired susceptibility to
arsenic-induced damage, or both.