| Literature DB >> 24278592 |
Myungsil Hwang1, Eun Ji Lee, Se Young Kweon, Mi Sun Park, Ji Yoon Jeong, Jun Ho Um, Sun Ah Kim, Bum Suk Han, Kwang Ho Lee, Hae Jung Yoon.
Abstract
While the ability to develop nanomaterials and incorporate them into products is advancing rapidly worldwide, understanding of the potential health safety effects of nanomaterials has proceeded at a much slower pace. Since 2008, Korea Food and Drug Administration (KFDA) started an investigation to prepare "Strategic Action Plan" to evaluate safety and nano risk management associated with foods, drugs, medical devices and cosmetics using nano-scale materials. Although there are some studies related to potential risk of nanomaterials, physical-chemical characterization of nanomaterials is not clear yet and these do not offer enough information due to their limitations. Their uncertainties make it impossible to determine whether nanomaterials are actually hazardous to human. According to the above mention, we have some problems to conduct the human exposure risk assessment currently. On the other hand, uncertainty about safety may lead to polarized public debate and to businesses unwillingness for further nanotechnology investigation. Therefore, the criteria and methods to assess possible adverse effects of nanomaterials have been vigorously taken into consideration by many international organizations: the World Health Organization, the Organization for Economic and Commercial Development and the European Commission. The object of this study was to develop risk assessment principles for safety management of future nanoproducts and also to identify areas of research to strengthen risk assessment for nanomaterials. The research roadmaps which were proposed in this study will be helpful to fill up the current gaps in knowledge relevant nano risk assessment.Entities:
Keywords: Nanomaterials; Nanoproducts; Research roadmap; Risk assessment
Year: 2012 PMID: 24278592 PMCID: PMC3834411 DOI: 10.5487/TR.2012.28.2.073
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxicol Res ISSN: 1976-8257
Fig. 1.Number of total products listed, by date of inventory update, with regression analysis (left) and Numbers of products, according to region (right) (adapted from http://www.nanotechproject.org/inventories/consumer/analysis_draft/).
Category of relevant products with KFDA (* is marked when overlapped with other category’s products)
| Main category | Sub category | Product(type) | Etc |
|---|---|---|---|
| Food and Beverage | Cooking | 1 | Nano silver cutting board |
| Storage | 4* | (Overlapped with feeding bottle(1 type) of Goods for Children) | |
| - | 1 | Washer | |
| Generic | 4 | ||
| Goods for Children | Bascics | 7* | (Overlapped 2 type products of Personal Care) |
| Health and Fitness | Cosmetics | 9 | |
| Personal Care | 19* | (Overlapped 2 type products of Goods for Children) | |
| Total | 42 | ||
Fig. 2.Step-by-step flow sheet for exposure estimation and risk assessment of nanomaterials such as nano-related food and drug.
Research fields that will be secured to risk assessment nanomaterials by nano-food and drug
| Research planning & information management | - Establishing sampling strategies for collecting exposure data and guidelines for collecting standardized data | ||
| - Conducting survey periodically at the national level about the current state of customer exposure by using nanoproducts | |||
| - Statistical analysis, data quality assurance and database development of collecting exposure information | |||
| Exposure assessment (monitoring methods) | - Developing and standardizing measurement methods (establishing guidelines) of nanomaterials (nanomaterials in products, low-dose analysis, etc) | ||
| - Developing exposure by routes such as ingestion, inhalation or skin contact monitoring methods and human-body monitoring methods | |||
| - Developing biomarkers for identifying early exposure | |||
| - Developing techniques and model for quantitative, half-quantitative, or qualitative exposure prediction | |||
| - Developing exposure scenarios of nanomaterials (exposue period attributes: acute/chronic, persistent/ intermittent, cumulative/complex, etc) | |||
| Dose-response (toxicity mechanism) | - Toxicity mechanism studies for analyzing co-relationship between exposure and internal dose, such as dose in target vessel, toxicologically | ||
| - Data related preclinical effects (animal toxicity tests such as immune toxicity, neurotoxicity, reproductive toxicity) | |||
| - Studies related high-dose, low-dose, or extrapolation and human body effects by risks identified in animal toxicity tests | |||
| - Studies related the prediction model of toxicokinetic data or behaviors in the body | |||
| Education and communication | - Training for making experts in each field | ||
| - Continuous exchange of information with the industrial and academic world, consumer group, etc) | |||
| - Establishing system for information exchange through International Symposium or international cooperation research | |||
Fig. 3.Research and development roadmap for the risk assessment of nanomaterials.