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Risk Assessment

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'All substances are poisons; there is none which is not ... 1 Railways. 4 Car. 50 Bicycle. 70 Pedestrian. 100 Motorbike. Risks. Deaths per 106 participant hours ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Risk Assessment


1
Risk Assessment
  • Chemicals, Risk Cancer 9
  • David R. Bell
  • Risk analysis, perception management ISBN
    0-85403-467-6

2
Why Risk Assess ?
  • Unsatisfactory to wait for epidemiology
  • HAZARD
  • The ability to cause cancer
  • RISK
  • What is the chance of it doing so ?
  • Paracelsus
  • All substances are poisons there is none which
    is not a poison. The right dose differentiates a
    poison and a remedy

3
Hazard Assessment
  • Use of Maximal Tolerated Dose (MTD) in two-animal
    bioassay
  • High dose required to obtain a significant result
  • Human exposure at low dose
  • How to extrapolate from high dose to low dose ?

4
Extrapolation
Data
Extrapolation
5
Extrapolation
US/ Europe 1 cancer in 106 is tolerable UK
guidelines more flexible
Extrapolation
6
Extrapolation 3
No Observed Effect Level
NOEL
7
Linear extrapolation
  • Mechanism associated with genotoxicity
  • 1 DNA adduct may lead to a single mutation may
    lead to cancer
  • No safe dose
  • Any amount of chemical will cause cancer
  • Conservative

8
Linear extrapolation
  • Carcinogens may require metabolic activation
  • Enzyme kinetics are non-linear
  • Trichloroethylene produces lung tumours in mouse,
    but not rat
  • TCE metabolised to chloral in mouse
  • P450 mediated species differences (TCE.pdf)

9
Linear extrapolation
  • Non-genotoxic carcinogens activate receptors
  • Receptor activation follows non-linear kinetics

V
Substrate
10
Is linear extrapolation correct ?
  • Linearity has been tested for acetyl-aminofluorene
    , which produces liver and bladder cancers- down
    to 1
  • Linear for liver cancer 30-150 ppm
  • Non-linear for bladder cancer
  • NOEL of 60 ppm
  • Increased bladder DNA synthesis above 60 ppm AAF

11
Linear extrapolation
  • For a chemical which causes cancer
  • Extrapolate linearly to a level which causes
    cancer at 1 in 106
  • i.e. MTD/ 1 000 000
  • Applies to pesticides/ fungicides/ industrial
    chemicals/ etc
  • Pharmaceuticals risk/ benefit balance
  • UK regulation less clear

12
Carcinogen exposure
  • gt60 of all chemicals are carcinogens
  • Food is composed of chemicals
  • Plants produce a variety of secondary products
  • Pesticides
  • Of a selection of plant pesticides, 27/52 were
    carcinogenic

13
Carcinogen exposure
  • Estimate that people eat 1.5 g of natural
    pesticides per day
  • 2g of burnt food products
  • 50 carcinogens
  • 1 cup of coffee contains 32mgs of known
    carcinogenic chemicals ( gt1000 untested)

14
Carcinogen exposure
  • Epidemiology fruit veg are beneficial
  • It is not clear that there is evidence that low
    dose effects are significant for human cancer
  • Compare lt0.1mg of synthetic pesticides
  • Why regulate synthetic pesticides when 99.99 of
    pesticides are natural chemicals ?

15
Risk
  • Deaths per 109 km
  • 1 Railways
  • 4 Car
  • 50 Bicycle
  • 70 Pedestrian
  • 100 Motorbike

16
Risks
  • Deaths per 106 participant hours
  • 0.5 boxing
  • 10 canoeing
  • 45 cave exploring
  • 220 scuba
  • 1500 hang-gliding

17
Acceptability of risk
Disease
Motor crash
Cancer
Pregnancy
Botulism
Flood
smallpox vaccine
18
Consequences of perception
  • Government health campaigns to stop people
    smoking
  • Educate the public about the risks of smoking
  • The public believe the risk is worse than it is
  • ???

19
Factors influencing perception
  • Involuntary exposure
  • No personal control
  • Uncertainty about probabilities/ consequences
  • Lack of experience
  • Effects of exposure delayed in time
  • Genetic effects
  • Infrequent but catastrophic events (Kill size)
  • Benefits not highly visible
  • Benefits go to others
  • Accidents caused by human failure

20
The public and risk regulation
  • The public has a view on risk
  • This is an unknown, and can change dramatically
  • Is the public view a basis for regulation ?
  • Risk assessment is performed on behalf of the
    public, and must have public confidence

21
Cost/ benefit analysis
  • How much is the cost of regulation ?
  • How much benefit accrues from this ?
  • The cost of reducing chemical discharges can be
    enormous
  • Reducing dioxin emissions during burning/
    bleaching
  • Requirement for expensive incinerators

22
Cost/ benefit analysis
  • Use of Chlorination for bleaching/ sterilising
    water supplies
  • Production of chloromethanes, which may be
    carcinogenic
  • Greater risks with no chlorination
  • EPA estimates a cost of 140 billion (1997)
  • Highly inefficient method of saving life

23
Food standards
  • Major food killers
  • Obesity, heart disease, colon cancer
  • Small contribution from exposure to synthetic
    chemicals
  • Public expectation that chemicals cause cancer,
    cf organic food
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