Angiosarcoma Clusters are hard to prove

In individual cases where you can show Exposure to Vinyl Chloride then connecting that exposure with hepatic Angiosarcoma is a little easier.  In cancer cluster cases it becomes much more difficult because there are so many variables out in the world.  Where did the VC come from? How much actually made it into contact with the victim.

In an industrial exposure case, can at least show where the exposure was and often can quite specifically show how intense the exposure was.

Genuine cancer clusters account for only a small number of suspected clusters, said Tim Aldrich, an epidemiologist who has studied disease clusters across the nation for three decades.

And even in those cases, the actual cause of a cluster often is never discovered.

One of the best-known cases of a bona fide cancer cluster, Aldrich said, occurred in the mid-1990s at Toms River, N.J., where there appeared to be pediatric cancer clustering. Toms River is adjacent to two "Superfund" sites, designated as high priorities for cleanup by the Environmental Protection Agency because of the presence of hazardous waste.

A study over several years concluded that no single risk factor was responsible for the elevated level of childhood cancer in that region.

Environmental toxins generally cause a specific, rare cancer, experts say. Vinyl chloride monomer, for example, has been found to elevate the risk of hepatic angiosarcoma, a rare liver cancer.


Angiosarcoma definition from NCI

From the National Cancer Institute

angiosarcoma (AN-jee-o-sar-KO-ma)

  A type of cancer that begins in the cells that line blood vessels or lymph vessels. Cancer that begins in blood vessels is called hemangiosarcoma. Cancer that begins in lymph vessels is called lymphangiosarcoma.

Vinyl Chloride Lawsuit: McCollum Lake

We are involved with individual lawsuits, mostly concerning industrial exposure.  Here is an article covering a lawsuit claiming that liver cancer (probably angiosarcoma) was caused by environmental exposure to vinyl chloride.

The family of a longtime McHenry resident has become the latest to sue two Ringwood manufacturers for allegedly causing cancer by polluting air and groundwater.

Next of kin of the late Edward Linnane filed the lawsuit late last month in Pennsylvania state court accusing Rohm and Haas and Modine Manufacturing Co. of causing the liver cancer that killed Linnane, 74, in 1993. The lawsuit is the 23rd to be filed on behalf of current or former McCullom Lake area residents since April 2006.

Source:  Northwest Herald

It's in Beauty Salons too

Careful.  These products (vinyl Chloride) are not just in industrial settings.  Vinyl Chloride was once very common in beauty salons.  It still shows up there...

One of the most common types of synthetic hair is made from fibers known as modacrylics. These consist of a long chain synthetic polymers composed of less than 85% but at least 35% by weight of acrylonitrile units. (-CH2CH[CN]-)x. (I’m sorry, but the Left Brain made me put in the chemical structure. I apologize in advance for the geekiness.) Modacrylics can also include mixtures of acrylonitrile and other materials, such as vinyl chloride, vinylidene chloride or vinyl bromide. (Yawn, enough organic chemistry already!)


Source:  The Beauty Brains

What is Angiosarcoma?

Angiosarcoma is a type of cancer.  This type of cancer is one that lines blood vessels or lymph vessels.  Another word that you might here associated with this is hemangiosarcoma if it is associated with blood vessels and lymphangiosarcoma if it is associated with Lymph vessels.


Hemangiosarcoma is a rare, rapidly growing, highly invasive variety of cancer. It is a blood-fed sarcoma; that is, blood vessels grow directly into the tumor and it is typically filled with blood. A frequent cause of death is the rupturing of this tumor, causing the victim to rapidly bleed to death.

Sources:  Wikipedia: Angiosarcoma

Welcome to the Angiosarcoma Law Blog

Welcome to the Angiosarcoma Law Blog.  we have set up this blog to discuss the connection between Angiosarcoma and Vinyl Chloride.  The lawyers in our office are investigating cases where angiosarcoma has been caused by Vinyl Chloride exposure.