Title: Toxicology (Summary)
1Toxicology (Summary)
- Exposure Hazard Risk
- All substances can be a poison
- Dose determines the response
- Pathway, duration and frequency of exposure and
chemical determine dose - Absorption, distribution, metabolism excretion
- The extent of the effect is dependent upon the
concentration of the active compound at site of
action over time - Bioactivation compounds to reactive metabolites
- Individual variation of the organism will affect
ADME
2Dose (intake) X Toxicity Risk
- The does makes the poison
- Dose/intake are exposure
- That is
- no matter how dangerous the toxicant
- no risk without exposure
3Risk
- Technical
- of people that will be injured, become ill, or
die
- Non-Technical
- Upsetting, frightening, or enraging
4Risk Assessment
- A process or method by which we assess the nature
and magnitude of risk. - hazardous waste disposal and chemicals
- new and existing technologies
- site facilities
- set priorities
- develop cleanup goals
5- Risk- the likelihood or possibility of
suffering injury, disease, or death from a hazard - Hazard-a source of risk, refers to a substance or
action that can cause harm - a hazard can not constitute a risk unless
there is exposure
6- 1983 NRC Report- Risk Assessment in the Federal
Government Managing the Process - 1. Hazard identification
- 2. Dose-response assessment
- 3. Exposure assessment
- 4. Risk characterization
7Congressional Commission on Risk Assessment
Risk Assessment and Risk Management in Regulatory
Decision-Making (1997)
8Hazard Identification
- Determining whether a chemical, under plausible
circumstances, may cause harm to human health or
the environment
9Types of Information
- 1. Epidemiological studies
- 2. Animal bioassays
- 3. In vitro tests
- 4. SAR analyses
10- Animal Bioassays
- acute studies
- subchronic studies
- chronic studies
11- Acute studies
- single exposure, multiple doses
- observed up to 14 days
- LD50, LC50
12Subchronic Studies
- Repeated exposures, 5 to 90 days
- variable exposure routes
- 3 doses
- NOEL, LOEL vs. NOAEL, LOAEL
- determine MTD
13Chronic Studies
- Several doses- MTD, 1/2 or 1/4 MTD, 0
- majority of lifetime (2 years rodent)
- lower doses, larger N subtle effects
- long time, high cost
14Exposure Assessment
- Estimate or directly measure the quantities of
chemicals received by individuals, populations,
or ecosystems - no risk without exposure
- output is quantitative, used in Risk
Charterization
15Questions to Answer
- Which chemicals reach target?
- How much exposure?
- In what way?
- For how long?
- Under what circumstances?
16- Biomonitoring- measuring a chemical or its
byproducts in tissues or fluids as an indicator
of exposure (exposure vs effect) - rarely done- expensive, limited tests
- time issues
17Ambient Monitoring
- Monitoring contaminants in media (soil, air,
water, etc.) to estimate exposure point
concentrations (EPCs) - when inadequate, often use modeling
18- Goal of modeling or ambient monitoring
- calculate an intake or dose for organism
- Dose (intake, exposure) x Toxicity Risk
19Intake C x CR x EFD BW x AT
- I is intake or dose
- C is chemical concentration
- CR is contact rate
- EFD is exposure frequency and duration
- BW is body weight
- AT is averaging time
20- These equations are used to calculate doses from
exposure pathways - values for inputs are as realistic as research
allows (Exposure Factors Handbook) - but many uncertainties exist
21- At GAEPD, evaluate Reasonably Maximally- Exposed
Individual (RME) - not a worst case scenario
- may be appropriate to contrast with exposure
estimates calculated from central tendency
estimates - Probability Density Functions (Monte Carlo
simulations)
22Total Dose (Intake) sum of all doses from
individual pathways
- chronic versus intermittent exposures?
- aggregate
23DOSE-RESPONSE ASSESSMENT
- Intake x Toxicity Risk
- often must extrapolate from animal studies
- two important assumptions
- 1. Thresholds for non-cancer
- 2. No thresholds for cancer
24Dose-Response Relationship
4
RESPONSE
0-1 NOAEL 2-3 Linear Range 4 Maximum Response
As the dose increases. so does the
response
3
2
0
1
DOSE
DOSE DETERMINES THE BIOLOGICAL RESPONSE
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27Thresholds exist for most biological effects
- Doses exist below which no adverse effects are
observable in a population of exposed individuals
28Thresholds do not exist for carcinogens.
- Any level of exposure to the chemical corresponds
to some non-zero increase of inducing genotoxic
effects.
29Non-cancer evaluation
- Reference Dose- an estimate (with uncertainty
spanning perhaps an order of magnitude) of a
daily or continuous exposure for human
populations, including sensitive subgroups, that
is likely to be without appreciable risks of
deleterious effects occurring in a lifetime.
30RfD NOAEL or LOAELUFs x MFs
- NOAEL OR LOAEL for critical effect
31UF 1 to 10 to account for
- Variation in humans
- extrapolation from animals to humans
- subchronic instead of chronic
- LOAEL instead of NOAEL
32Assumptions
- Population threshold exists
- RfD estimate represents subthreshold doses
- preventing critical effect protects against all
effects
33CANCER EVALUATION
- EPAs guidelines published in 1986
- weight of evidence- all human and animal
3486 Scheme
- Group A- known human carcinogen sufficient human
data - Group B- probable human carcinogen
- B1- limited human, sufficient animal data
- B2- inadequate human, sufficient animal data
35- Group C- possible human equivocable animal data
- Group D- not classifiable inadequate or no data
- Group E- evidence of noncarcinogenicity
36Current practice
- Data (usually animal) fit with model to
extrapolate into low dose range - EPA uses Linearized Multistage Model
37LMS
- Accommodates nonlinearity at high doses
- Constrains results to linear form at low doses
- Based on current understanding of cancer as
multistage process
38LMS
- Output in form of slope factor
- Represents steepness of dose-response curve
(larger number more potent) - Slope factor represents upper bound (95th
percentile) caner risk per unit dose
39Risk Characterization
- Where all components of assessment are brought
together in a quantitative evaluation and
transparent qualitative discussion
40- Integrate information from Haz ID, Dose-Response,
and Exp Assess - discuss overall quality, degree of confidence in
estimates and conclusions (uncertainty) - describe risk to individuals and populations
(extent, severity, probable harm)
41- Calculating risk (numeric) and hazard indices
- Non-cancer- hazard quotient, hazard index
- HQ intake/ RfD
- Both intake and RfD have units of mg/kg-day
42- HQ lt 1.0 no detrimental effects
- HQ gt 1.0 potential for effects to occur
- HI is sum of HQs
- Summing based on assumption of additivity of
effects
43Cancer risk
- Calculate theoretical lifetime
- Cancer risk from estimated exposure or intake
- Excess or additional risk
- Upper-bound on risk
44Risk Intake x SF
- Intake units of mg/kg-day
- SF units of 1/(mg/kg-day)
- Risk is unitless (probability)
- Sum cancer risk for all chemicals
45Risk Char Discussion
- Confidence in key site-related chemical identity
and conc. relative to background - Describe types of cancer and health effects,
distinguish between known effects in humans
versus animal derived or predicted
46- Confidence in quantitative tox info used to
estimate risk, and qualitative info on chemicals
not included in assessment - Confide in exposure estimates for key pathways
and inputs - Magnitude of cancer risks and non-cancer HIs
47- Major factors driving risk (chem., pways, and
pway combinations) - Major factors reducing certainties and the
significance of uncertainties (ex. adding risk
over chemicals and pways) - Exposed population characteristics
48Risk Hazard Outrage(the non-technical side)
- Voluntary vs. Involuntary
- Natural vs. Industrial
- Familiar vs. Exotic
- Dreaded or Not
49WEB RESOURCES
- www.epa.gov/ncea/raf/cancer.htm
- Draft revised guidelines for carcinogenic risk
assessment (1999) - www.epa.gov/iris/
- Methylmercury
- Polychorinated biphenyls