| Literature DB >> 33795841 |
Rachel D Rogers1, Christopher M Reh2, Patrick Breysse2,3.
Abstract
The National Center for Environmental Health (NCEH), part of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR) support and conduct research advancing national, state, and local public health response to per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS). PFAS are a group of manufactured chemicals used in industry and consumer products that persist in the environment. Given the growing evidence linking PFAS with adverse health effects in humans, NCEH and ATSDR developed a public health research framework to capture the broad range of PFAS research activities being conducted and supported by the agency to determine future research priorities and identify opportunities for interagency collaboration. The framework was conceptualized via a multidisciplinary visioning process designed to identify compelling questions and research activities that span five scientific domains: toxicology, exposure, human health, public health action, and cross-cutting priorities. This paper presents a framework, compelling questions and research activities to help NCEH and ATSDR advance scientific discovery in partnership with federal, state, and local stakeholders as part of a comprehensive public health response to PFAS contamination.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33795841 PMCID: PMC8015929 DOI: 10.1038/s41370-021-00316-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Expo Sci Environ Epidemiol ISSN: 1559-0631 Impact factor: 5.563
Fig. 1Summary of NCEH/ATSDR PFAS Research Initiatives, 1999–2019.
This timeline shows NCEH/ATSDR research activites over the past twenty years, demonstrating critical support for national, state, and local public health response to concerns about PFAS exposure.
Fig. 2NCEH/ATSDR Research Framework for PFAS.
This figure illustrates the interrelationships among scientific domains within the NCEH/ATSDR approach to PFAS concerns.
NCEH/ATSDR compelling questions for PFAS and ongoing role.
| NCEH/ATSDR compelling questions for PFAS | NCEH/ATSDR ongoing role |
|---|---|
| 1. Toxicology | |
| 1.1 What are the critical windows of exposure and the toxicokinetic (absorption, distribution, metabolism, excretion, clearance mechanisms, and biological half-life) and toxicodynamic (mechanisms of toxicological action) properties of individual PFAS, including less-studied and emerging types and common mixtures of PFAS? | • Ongoing revision and update of the agency’s toxicological profiles for PFAS. • Determining which toxicological endpoints and mechanisms are most relevant to human health. • Translating basic toxicology research into guidance values or minimum risk levels (MRLs) that are a critical tool for evaluating human PFAS exposure. |
| 1.2 How does chemical structure affect the physical, chemical, and biological behavior of PFAS? | • Using computational methods, including physiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) modeling and quantitative structure activity relationship (QSAR) modeling, to build the knowledge base for less well-characterized PFAS and to inform clustering or grouping PFAS for class-based evaluation. |
| 1.3 How can PFAS be grouped according to their toxicological profiles? | |
| 2. Exposure | |
| 2.1 How can identification of individuals and communities exposed to PFAS-contaminated drinking water be improved? | • Developing an interactive geographic information systems (GIS) tool to help identify locations in the United States that have a higher risk for PFAS contamination, including identification and mapping of industries/location where PFAS are made or used. • Enabling researchers and public health professionals to track PFAS exposure in drinking water through EPA’s Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring Rule data in the NEPHTN. • Conducting exposure assessments in communities with PFAS-contaminated drinking water. • Supporting state, tribal, local, and territorial (STLT) health departments to conduct PFAS biomonitoring activities to characterize exposure in communities with contaminated drinking water through the PFAS exposure assessment technical tools (PEATT). • Providing laboratory biomonitoring analytical support and research guidance to state, local, and academic PFAS studies. |
| 2.2 What factors affect the likelihood of PFAS exposure from non-drinking water sources? | • Collecting information from communities about behaviors that influence PFAS exposure from dietary sources to evaluate the contribution of the dietary pathway. • Assessing exposure to PFAS in environmental media in communities affected by contamination. |
| 2.3 What are the most appropriate biomarkers of exposure for PFAS, including less-studied and emerging species? | • Monitoring U.S. population exposure to PFAS using the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) in the National Biomonitoring Program. • Developing new methods for PFAS testing in the National Biomonitoring Program (e.g., urine). |
| 2.4 What are the most common mixtures of PFAS in drinking water? | • Conducting exposure assessments in communities with PFAS-contaminated drinking water to identify predictable exposure profiles. • Developing state-of-the-art analytical methods for PFAS testing through the National Biomonitoring Program. |
| 2.5 What are the historical exposures of communities identified as having PFAS-contaminated drinking water? | • Physiologically based pharmacokinetic modeling of human exposure to PFAS. • Developing models to historically reconstruct PFAS concentrations in communities. |
| 2.6 What are the PFAS biomonitoring concentration profiles associated with average and background exposure (not with a site-specific source, such as contaminated drinking water)? | • Monitoring groups of PFAS in the blood through NHANES. • Developing state-of-the-art analytical methods for PFAS testing through the National Biomonitoring Program. |
| 2.7 What is the contribution of food to PFAS exposure? | • Identifying emerging needs for improved analytical detection methods for PFAS in environmental media other than water. • Conducting a literature review to determine and evaluate existing data characterizing PFAS exposure from dietary sources. • Collecting information from communities about behaviors that influence PFAS exposure from dietary sources to evaluate the contribution of the dietary pathway. • Supporting STLT health departments and other federal agencies in the identification and evaluation of dietary PFAS exposures (fish, game, cow’s milk, etc.). |
| 2.8 What is the contribution of soil and dust to PFAS exposure? | • Identifying emerging needs for improved analytical detection methods for PFAS in environmental media other than water. • Assessing exposure to PFAS from dust samples in communities affected by PFAS contamination. • Enhancing capacity of public health laboratories to expand access to PFAS testing in a variety of media. |
| 2.9 What is the contribution of wastewater, bio-solids, and other recycled materials to PFAS exposure? | • Identifying emerging needs for improved analytical detection methods for PFAS in environmental media other than water. • Supporting efforts to build capacity in public health laboratories as they expand access to PFAS testing in a variety of media. • Supporting risk assessments for exposures to PFAS through pathways other than drinking contaminated water. |
| 3. Human health | |
3.1 What is the association, if any, between PFAS exposure and the following health conditions? For each, how do observed associations differ for different PFAS mixtures? a. Birth outcomes or developmental effects b. Renal function c. Liver function d. Vaccine efficacy e. Susceptibility to particular infectious diseases f. Cancer/malignancies g. Cardiovascular disease h. Immune-mediated diseases | • Conducting epidemiologic studies to clarify the association between PFAS exposure and health outcomes. • Conducting literature reviews on PFAS exposure and human health effects including immunologic/inflammatory markers in humans and cancer. |
| 3.2 What factors influence the risk for PFAS-related health outcomes in individuals and populations (i.e., genetic characteristics, age, race/ethnicity, socioeconomic status, stress, pharmaceuticals)? | • Conducting a literature review to understand the role that environmental contamination events and community resilience play in stress and related health outcomes, and related strategies to foster and support resilience to stress from PFAS contamination. • Conducting a qualitative assessment with community leaders and public health practitioners to understand the experience of living in PFAS-affected communities. |
| 3.3 How might PFAS exposure affect potential susceptibility and severity of viral illness such as COVID-19? | • Supporting research to explore the intersection between PFAS exposure and susceptibility to viral infection such as COVID-19, including an assessment to determine the association between PFAS serum concentrations and COVID-19 infection severity and SARS-CoV-2 antibody titers. |
| 4. Public health action | |
| 4.1 Who are the most relevant stakeholders in PFAS-affected communities for translation and implementation of prevention research? | • Supporting regional community engagement and assessment of community needs related to PFAS. • Conducting social media analysis to better understand how the public searches for PFAS-related information, accesses web-based resources, and shares information. • Engaging pediatric environmental health specialty units (PEHSUs) across the country to support medical professionals responding to PFAS exposure in affected communities. • Engaging the research community to advance dissemination and implementation science for PFAS response. |
| 4.2 What are the most effective strategies to engage stakeholders for advancing PFAS public health research and practice? | |
| 4.3 How can health education and communication strategies for communities exposed to PFAS be enhanced? | • Developing educational materials for healthcare providers to address the concerns of PFAS-exposed patients. • Collaborating with professional medical organizations to share information, discuss emerging questions related to PFAS exposure, and assess the needs of the healthcare provider community. • Sponsoring grand rounds in communities across the United States to raise awareness about PFAS among practitioners. • Engaging PEHSUs across the country to support medical professionals responding to PFAS exposure in affected communities. • Promoting community engagement and assessment of community needs related to PFAS concerns throughout the country. • Supporting a community assistance panel for the community near the former Pease Air Force Base in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, to understand community health concerns, provide information on PFAS exposure and ongoing research efforts, and learn about how best engage the community in research activities. |
| 4.4 What are the clinical practice recommendations for addressing PFAS exposure concerns in patients? | • Developing educational materials for healthcare providers to address the concerns of PFAS-exposed patients. • Collaborating with professional medical organizations to provide clinical practice guidance, share information, discuss emerging questions related to PFAS exposure, and assess the needs of healthcare providers. • Sponsoring grand rounds in communities across the United States to raise awareness about PFAS among practitioners. • Engaging Pediatric Environmental Health Specialty Units (PEHSUs) across the country to support medical professionals responding to PFAS exposure in affected communities. |
| 4.5 How can capacity in public health laboratories to analyze environmental, food, and biological samples for PFAS be expanded? | • Conducting needs assessments in collaboration with national organizations identify opportunities for capacity building in public health laboratories. |
| 4.6 Can more effective and lower-cost rapid testing methods and tools be developed to measure PFAS in water or different media? | • Partnering with public health laboratories through the State Biomonitoring Cooperative Agreement to increase states’ capability and capacity to conduct biomonitoring. |
| 5. Cross-cutting priorities | |
| 5.1 What are the broader effects of PFAS contamination (e.g., economic, social, behavioral)? | • Conducting a literature review to understand the role that environmental contamination events and community resilience play in stress and related health outcomes, and related strategies to foster and support resilience to stress from PFAS contamination. |
| 5.2 What is the relationship between environmental contamination of PFAS and psychosocial stress among individuals, families, and communities? | • Conducting a qualitative assessment with community leaders and public health practitioners to understand the experience of living in PFAS-affected communities. |
| 5.4 How can groundwater contaminant fate and transport modeling and plume characterization be improved? | • Conducting expert panels to develop an improved model for the historical reconstruction of PFAS exposure. |
| 5.5 How can biomonitoring data be enhanced with more detailed exposure data (e.g., questionnaires, drinking water, dietary data, etc.)? | • Designing questionnaires for health and exposure studies to enhance assessment of exposure and complement biomonitoring data. |
| 5.6 How can laboratory methods keep pace with the rapidly expanding catalog of PFAS in commercial use? | • Developing new methods for measuring PFAS in a variety of biological samples. |
| 5.7 How can advances in computational toxicology be harnessed to better understand the effects of exposure? | • Conducting computational toxicology to integrate in silico methods with traditional approaches. |
| 5.8 How can current risk assessment methodologies be improved to inform development of health-based guidelines for PFAS and mixtures? | • Developing MRLs for individual PFAS. |
| 5.9 How can data standardization, data sharing, and advanced analytics enhance the value of data for PFAS research? | • Exploring the utility of electronic health records as a surveillance tool to inform the design of larger epidemiologic investigations. • Developing an interactive geographic information systems tool to help identify locations in the United States that have a higher risk for PFAS contamination. • Implementing innovative biomonitoring report back methods to provide personalized exposure information with context to aid in interpretation of results across all levels of scientific literacy. • Establishing a centralized data repository to include PFAS data sets collected or generated by NCEH/ATSDR funded projects, and external PFAS-related environmental, biomonitoring, and health data that are available for public use, purchase, or sharing via data use agreements. |