| Literature DB >> 31036021 |
Tasha Stoiber1, Alexis Temkin2, David Andrews2, Chris Campbell2, Olga V Naidenko2.
Abstract
The health risks of drinking water contaminants and the economic benefits of drinking water standards are typically assessed one chemical at a time, an approach that misses the health impacts of co-occurring contaminants in drinking water. In contrast, a cumulative risk framework has become common in air quality evaluations such as the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's National Air Toxics Assessment. We posit that the drinking water field would benefit from making the transition to a unified assessment framework for multiple contaminants that can overcome the long-standing challenge of treating cancer and non-cancer contaminants separately. Here we present a cumulative risk methodology that combines a risk-based cancer metric with a weighted health indicator index for non-cancer contaminants and incorporates disability weights from the Global Burden of Disease study. Our methodology generates a numeric toxicity score reflecting the potential health impacts for the sum of contaminants present in each sample of drinking water. Further research is needed to refine the risk and toxicity parameters for specific contaminants and to address the mode of interaction between co-occurring chemicals. As this cumulative risk model goes through future refinements, we anticipate that it would provide information that can help communities and policy makers evaluate different options for drinking water treatment.Entities:
Keywords: Cumulative risk; Disability weighting; Drinking water; Toxicity assessment
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31036021 PMCID: PMC6489338 DOI: 10.1186/s12940-019-0475-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health ISSN: 1476-069X Impact factor: 5.984
Cumulative cancer risks from drinking water contaminants in community water systems in California
| Cumulative cancer risk | Number of community water systems | Exposed population | Estimated number of lifetime cancer cases | Percent contribution to total drinking water-related lifetime cancer cases |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| > 10−3 | 495 | 3,103,996 | 4860 | 31% |
| 10−4 – 10−3 | 1177 | 28,497,278 | 10,427 | 68% |
| 10−5 – 10−4 | 435 | 2,598,480 | 149 | 1% |
| < 10−5 | 107 | 4,510,325 | 13 | 0.09% |
| Total | 38,710,079 | 15,449 |
Fig. 1a. Distribution of cumulative lifetime cancer risks for California public water systems. Y axis: cumulative cancer risk for each water system; X axis: water utilities plotted according to the size of population served. b and c. Contribution to the lifetime cancer risk by individual contaminants or contaminant groups. DBPs refer to nine carcinogenic disinfection byproducts listed in Additional file 1: Table S1. b: Public water systems with cumulative lifetime cancer risk greater than 10−3. c: Public water systems with cumulative lifetime cancer risk between 10− 4 and 10− 3
Fig. 2a: Relative Health Index scores for water quality scenarios for two California water systems serving 70,000 to 90,000 people. cDBPs refer to nine carcinogenic disinfection byproducts listed in Additional file 1: Table S1. b and c: Distribution of cumulative Relative Health Indicator scores for cancer and non-cancer effects in the highest risk tier (b, cumulative scores greater than 1000) and the second highest risk tier (c, cumulative scores of 100–1000). For all data presented in this figure, severity score of 0.041 was used for arsenic as is the most conservative estimate of arsenic’s non-cancer toxicity (Additional file 1: Table S3); and incidence factor of 1% was used for the calculation of all non-cancer scores
Fig. 3Distribution of Relative Health Indicator scores for three different non-cancer severity factors and three different incidence factors for arsenic. All calculations are conducted for a single arsenic concentration of 1 μg/L. This concentration corresponds to cancer risk level of 2.5 × 10− 4, and a cancer Relative Health Indicator score of 180