4.4 Article

Chemical-specific screening criteria for interpretation of biomonitoring data for volatile organic compounds (VOCs) - Application of steady-state PBPK model solutions

Journal

REGULATORY TOXICOLOGY AND PHARMACOLOGY
Volume 58, Issue 1, Pages 33-44

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.yrtph.2010.05.011

Keywords

Biomonitoring; Volatile organic compounds; Pharmacokinetic models; Risk assessment

Funding

  1. American Chemistry Council (ACC)
  2. American Petroleum Institute (API)
  3. Dow Chemical Company

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The National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) generates population-representative biomonitoring data for many chemicals including volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in blood. However, no health or risk-based screening values are available to evaluate these data from a health safety perspective or to use in prioritizing among chemicals for possible risk management actions. We gathered existing risk assessment-based chronic exposure reference values such as reference doses (RfDs), reference concentrations (RfCs), tolerable daily intakes (TDIs), cancer slope factors, etc. and key pharmacokinetic model parameters for 47 VOCs. Using steady-state solutions to a generic physiologically-based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) model structure, we estimated chemical-specific steady-state venous blood concentrations across chemicals associated with unit oral and inhalation exposure rates and with chronic exposure at the identified exposure reference values. The geometric means of the slopes relating modeled steady-state blood concentrations to steady-state exposure to a unit oral dose or unit inhalation concentration among 38 compounds with available pharmacokinetic parameters were 12.0 mu g/L per mg/kg-d (geometric standard deviation [GSD] of 3.2) and 3.2 mu g/L per mg/m(3) (GSD = 1.7), respectively. Chemical-specific blood concentration screening values based on non-cancer reference values for both oral and inhalation exposure range from 0.0005 to 100 mu g/L: blood concentrations associated with cancer risk-specific doses at the 1 E-05 risk level ranged from 5 E-06 to 6 E-02 mu g/L. The distribution of modeled steady-state blood concentrations associated with unit exposure levels across VOCs may provide a basis for estimating blood concentration screening values for VOCs that lack chemical-specific pharmacokinetic data. The screening blood concentrations presented here provide a tool for risk assessment-based evaluation of population biomonitoring data for VOCs and are most appropriately applied to central tendency estimates for such datasets. (C) 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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