Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8376699 | Computational Toxicology | 2018 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
Regulatory agencies across the world are facing the challenge of performing risk-based prioritization of thousands of chemicals in commerce. Here, we present an approach using the Threshold of Toxicological Concern (TTC) combined with heuristic high-throughput exposure (HTE) modelling to rank order chemicals for further evaluation. Accordingly, for risk-based prioritization, chemicals with exposuresâ¯>â¯TTC would be ranked as higher priority for further evaluation whereas substances with exposuresâ¯<â¯TTC would be ranked as lower priority. An initial proof of concept, using a dataset of 7986 substances with previously modeled median and upper 95% credible interval (UCI) total daily median exposure rates showed fewer than 5% of substances had UCI exposuresâ¯>â¯the Cramer Class III TTC (1.5â¯Î¼g/kg-day). We extended the analysis by profiling the same dataset through the TTC workflow published by Kroes et al. (2004) which accounts for known exclusions to the TTC as well as structural alerts. UCI exposures were then compared to the appropriate class-specific TTC. None of the substances categorized as Cramer Class I or Cramer Class II exceeded their respective TTC values and no more than 2% of substances categorized as Cramer Class III or acetylcholinesterase inhibitors exceeded their respective TTC values. The modeled UCI exposures for the majority of the 1853 chemicals with genotoxicity structural alerts did exceed the TTC of 0.0025â¯Î¼g/kg-day, but only 79 substances exceeded this TTC if median exposure values were used. For substances for which UCI exposures exceeded relevant TTC values, we highlight possible approaches for consideration to refine the HTE: TTC approach. Overall, coupling TTC with HTE offers promise as a pragmatic first step in ranking substances as part of a risk-based prioritization approach.
Keywords
LOAELLCSAlogKOWHTEThreshold of toxicological concern (TTC)TSCAILSINOAELHTSMOApKaOECDNHANESFood Standards Australia New ZealandFSANZTTCUCI(Q)SARAOPsUS EPAThreshold of toxicological concernUnited States Environmental Protection Agencyacid dissociation constantMode of actionREACHSMARTSOrganisation for Economic Co-operation and DevelopmentLowest-observed-adverse-effect levelhigh throughput screeningToxic Substances Control ActInternational Life Sciences InstituteHealth and Environmental Sciences InstituteHESIno-observed-adverse-effect levelAdverse Outcome Pathways
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Mathematics
Computational Mathematics
Authors
Grace Patlewicz, John F. Wambaugh, Susan P. Felter, Ted W. Simon, Richard A. Becker,