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      Dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT): ubiquity, persistence, and risks.

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      Environmental Health Perspectives

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          Abstract

          Due to uncontrolled use for several decades, dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT), probably the best known and most useful insecticide in the world, has damaged wildlife and might have negative effects on human health. This review gives a brief history of the use of DDT in various countries and presents the results of epidemiologic and experimental studies of carcinogenesis. Even though its use has been prohibited in most countries for ecologic considerations, mainly because of its negative impact on wildlife, it is still used in some developing countries for essential public health purposes, and it is still produced for export in at least three countries. Due to its stability and its capacity to accumulate in adipose tissue, it is found in human tissues, and there is now not a single living organism on the planet that does not contain DDT. The possible contribution of DDT to increasing the risks for cancers at various sites and its possible role as an endocrine disruptor deserve further investigation. Although there is convincing experimental evidence for the carcinogenicity of DDT and of its main metabolites DDE and DDD, epidemiologic studies have provided contrasting or inconclusive, although prevailingly negative, results. The presence and persistence of DDT and its metabolites worldwide are still problems of great relevance to public health. Efficient pesticides that do not have the negative properties of DDT, together with the development of alternative methods to fight malaria, should be sought with the goal of completely banning DDT.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Environ Health Perspect
          Environmental Health Perspectives
          0091-6765
          February 2002
          : 110
          : 2
          : 125-128
          Affiliations
          N.N. Blokhin Russian Cancer Research Centre, Kashirskoye 24, 115478 Moscow, Russian Federation. turusov@crc.umos.ru
          Article
          sc271_5_1835
          10.1289/ehp.02110125
          1240724
          11836138
          16922f1f-a2c3-40b5-af7f-3ad725952870
          History
          Categories
          Research Article

          Public health
          Public health

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