IRIS

Mercuric chloride (HgCl2)

CASRN 7487-94-7 | DTXSID5020811

Noncancer Assessment

Reference Dose for Oral Exposure (RfD) (PDF) (21 pp, 156 K) Last Updated: 05/01/1995

System RfD (mg/kg-day) Basis PoD Composite UF Confidence
Immune, Urinary 3 x 10 -4 Autoimmune effects (autoimmune glomerulonephritis) LOAEL : 3.17 x 10-1
mg/kg-day
1000 High

 


Reference Concentration for Inhalation Exposure (RfC) (PDF) (21 pp, 156 K)
Not assessed under the IRIS Program.

 

Cancer Assessment

Weight of Evidence for Cancer (PDF) (21 pp, 156 K) Last Updated: 05/01/1995

WOE Characterization Framework for WOE Characterization
C (Possible human carcinogen) Guidelines for Carcinogen Risk Assessment (U.S. EPA, 1986)
Basis:
  • Based on the absence of data in humans and limited evidence of carcinogenicity in rats and mice. Focal papillary hyperplasia and squamous cell papillomas in the forestomach as well as thyroid follicular cell adenomas and carcinomas were observed in male rats gavaged with mercuric chloride for 2 years. The relevance of the forestomach papillomas to assessment of cancer in humans is questionable because no evidence indicated that the papillomas progressed to malignancy. The relevance of the increase in thyroid tumors has also been questioned because these tumors are generally considered to be secondary to hyperplasia; this effect was not observed in the high-dose males. It should also be noted that the authors considered the doses used in the study to exceed the MTD for male rats. In the same study, evidence for increases in squamous cell papillomas in the forestomach of female rats was equivocal. In a second study, equivocal evidence for renal adenomas and adenocarcinomas was observed in male mice; there was a significant positive trend. This tumor type is rare in mice, and the increase in incidence was statistically significant when compared with historic controls. Two other nonpositive lifetime rodent studies were considered inadequate. Mercuric chloride showed mixed results in a number of genotoxicity assays.
  • This may be a synopsis of the full weight-of-evidence narrative.

Quantitative Estimate of Carcinogenic Risk from Oral Exposure (PDF) (21 pp, 156 K)

Not assessed under the IRIS Program.

Quantitative Estimate of Carcinogenic Risk from Inhalation Exposure (PDF) (21 pp, 156 K)

Not assessed under the IRIS Program.


Additional EPA toxicity information may be available by visiting the following sites:

You will need Adobe Reader to view some of the files on this page. See EPA's PDF page to learn more.

Contact Us to ask a question, provide feedback or report a problem.