| Literature DB >> 30540492 |
Peter Fantke1, Lesa Aylward2, Jane Bare3, Weihsueh A Chiu4, Robin Dodson5, Robert Dwyer6, Alexi Ernstoff7, Brett Howard8, Matti Jantunen9, Olivier Jolliet10, Richard Judson11, Nienke Kirchhübel1, Dingsheng Li12, Aubrey Miller13, Greg Paoli14, Paul Price11, Lorenz Rhomberg15, Beverly Shen16, Hyeong-Moo Shin17, Justin Teeguarden18, Daniel Vallero11, John Wambaugh11, Barbara A Wetmore11, Rosemary Zaleski19, Thomas E McKone16.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Life Cycle Initiative, hosted at the United Nations Environment Programme, selected human toxicity impacts from exposure to chemical substances as an impact category that requires global guidance to overcome current assessment challenges. The initiative leadership established the Human Toxicity Task Force to develop guidance on assessing human exposure and toxicity impacts. Based on input gathered at three workshops addressing the main current scientific challenges and questions, the task force built a roadmap for advancing human toxicity characterization, primarily for use in life cycle impact assessment (LCIA).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30540492 PMCID: PMC6371687 DOI: 10.1289/EHP3871
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health Perspect ISSN: 0091-6765 Impact factor: 9.031
Figure 1.Generalized illustrative representation of the existing life cycle human toxicity source-to-damage characterization framework. Units of metrics and impact pathways considered may differ between methods.
Figure 2.Key points for advancing current exposure and toxicity characterization in life cycle impact assessment (LCIA) and similar comparative assessment frameworks. These key questions were addressed during the scoping phase workshops—the Utrecht Guidance Workshop in October 2016, the Brussels Metals Workshop in May 2017, and the Research Triangle Park (RTP) Guidance Workshop in October 2017.
Figure 3.Proposal for an integrated near-field/far-field human exposure assessment framework, which builds on the intake fraction (iF) linking population-level chemical mass intake () to chemical mass emitted () to the environment (Bennett et al. 2002) covered in the existing framework for general population exposure settings, and on the product intake fraction (PiF) linking population intake to chemical mass in products () for consumer and occupational exposure settings (Jolliet et al. 2015). Arrows connecting boxes denote chemical mass transfer fractions derived from fate and exposure processes, as fully described in Fantke et al. (2016).
Figure 4.Hypothetical population effect response level as function of population exposure dose indicating that a certain fraction of the exposed population is above a defined threshold for a given exposure distribution. Units of exposure probability density are the inverse of whatever exposure level units are used on the x-axis (e.g., if exposure is in parts per million, exposure probability density has unit 1/ppm).
Figure 5.Lognormal threshold distribution–based population effect response level as function of population exposure dose level (based on WHO/IPCS 2014), indicating the exposure dose–response slope as a function of the exposure working point X. is the standard normal cumulative distribution, is the standard normal probability density, is the natural log exposure at which 50% of the population is affected, and is the variance of the population sensitivity distribution. The exposure working point could be estimated directly for the chemical of interest, or alternatively, as suggested by Huijbregts et al. (2005), defined as an “effective” background corresponding to the background incidence rate of the effect of interest.