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Health

Beware: This Everyday Washing Chemical May Drastically Increase Liver Disease Risk

Last updated: November 13, 2025 11:02 pm
Irma Khan
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A common everyday substance may silently triple your liver disease risk

Liver health experts are raising global concern after new research uncovered that a common everyday substance, widely used in homes, workplaces, and consumer products, may triple the risk of liver fibrosis — a serious form of liver scarring that can progress to cirrhosis, liver cancer, and liver failure.

The chemical identified: tetrachloroethylene (PCE)

Researchers have now confirmed that the substance in question is tetrachloroethylene (PCE) — a halogenated chemical heavily used in dry cleaning, adhesives, metal degreasers, spot removers, paint removers, silicone lubricants, and a wide range of household and industrial cleaning products.

The findings were published in Liver International and are based on an analysis of more than 1,600 adults in the NHANES 2017–2020 dataset. Scientists measured the amount of PCE circulating in participants’ blood and examined how it correlated with liver fibrosis.

PCE is widely used, and widely absorbed

According to the study, PCE exposure is far more common than many realize. It is found in:

  • Adhesives and strong glues
  • Brake cleaners
  • Dry cleaning solvents
  • Metal degreasing agents
  • Paint and varnish removers
  • Silicone-based lubricants
  • Fabric spot removers
  • Water-repellent sprays

Because PCE evaporates easily, people are exposed through inhalation, skin contact, and contaminated air, making this a global public health issue.

Study confirms PCE exposure triples the risk of liver fibrosis

Researchers found that:

  • 7% of all tested adults had detectable PCE in their bloodstream
  • Those with PCE exposure were three times more likely to have significant liver fibrosis
  • Every 1 ng/mL increase in blood PCE raised fibrosis risk fivefold

This was described as a dose-response relationship — meaning higher exposure led directly to greater damage.

Dr. Brian P. Lee, hepatologist and lead author, explained that PCE has long been known to damage liver tissue in laboratory animals, but this is the strongest evidence yet showing its harmful effect in humans.

Why PCE harms the liver

Once PCE is metabolized in the liver, its byproducts attack the fat structure of liver cell membranes, triggering:

  • Inflammation
  • Cellular damage
  • Fibrosis (scarring)

Over time, fibrosis can silently progress to:

  • Cirrhosis
  • Liver cancer
  • Full liver failure

Doctors warn that liver fibrosis is the number one predictor of liver-related death.

PCE also linked to several other serious diseases

Previous research has associated PCE exposure with:

  • Kidney damage
  • Neurotoxicity
  • Bladder cancer
  • Non-Hodgkin lymphoma

These associations make PCE one of the most concerning environmental toxins still widely used in consumer settings.

Experts call for urgent policy action

Dr. Lee emphasized that doctors must begin asking patients about environmental exposures, especially when liver disease risk factors are unclear. He added:

“Environmental toxins, like PCE, may be important contributors to liver disease. Policymakers must enact protections against these poisons.”

Other liver specialists, including Dr. Lee F. Peng, noted that halogenated hydrocarbons have a long history of causing severe liver injury — sometimes leading to liver transplantation in cases of irreversible failure.

A global wake-up call for families, workplaces, and regulators

This study underscores the need for:

  • Stronger chemical safety regulations
  • Better labeling of toxic household chemicals
  • Screening individuals at higher environmental risk
  • Increasing public awareness about chemical exposures
  • Reducing PCE use in consumer and industrial applications

With liver disease now rising worldwide, identifying avoidable environmental toxins like PCE is critical for prevention.

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