4.8 Review

The Next Frontier of Environmental Unknowns: Substances of Unknown or Variable Composition, Complex Reaction Products, or Biological Materials (UVCBs)

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 56, Issue 12, Pages 7448-7466

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.2c00321

Keywords

mixtures; UVCB; complex substances; testing and assessment; cheminformatics; environmental pollutants

Funding

  1. Luxembourg National Research Fund (FNR) [A18/BM/12341006]
  2. National Institutes of Health [2R44TR002528-02]
  3. European Union under the Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme [101036756]
  4. ETH Zurich as part of the NCCR Catalysis [180544]
  5. National Centre of Competence in Research - Swiss National Science Foundation

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Substances of unknown or variable composition, complex reaction products, or biological materials (UVCBs) are complex chemical mixtures produced and used worldwide. Applying chemical assessments to UVCBs is challenging due to their unknown or variable composition. New approaches for UVCB assessment are being developed in various fields, but there are information gaps and fragmented practices. Improved data collection and management, as well as concerted efforts from stakeholders, are needed for proper assessment and management of UVCBs.
Substances of unknown or variable composition, complex reaction products, or biological materials (UVCBs) are over 70 000 complex chemical mixtures produced and used at significant levels worldwide. Due to their unknown or variable composition, applying chemical assessments originally developed for individual compounds to UVCBs is challenging, which impedes sound management of these substances. Across the analytical sciences, toxicology, cheminformatics, and regulatory practice, new approaches addressing specific aspects of UVCB assessment are being developed, albeit in a fragmented manner. This review attempts to convey the big picture of the state of the art in dealing with UVCBs by holistically examining UVCB characterization and chemical identity representation, as well as hazard, exposure, and risk assessment. Overall, information gaps on chemical identities underpin the fundamental challenges concerning UVCBs, and better reporting and substance characterization efforts are needed to support subsequent chemical assessments. To this end, an information level scheme for improved UVCB data collection and management within databases is proposed. The development of UVCB testing shows early progress, in line with three main methods: whole substance, known constituents, and fraction profiling. For toxicity assessment, one option is a whole-mixture testing approach. If the identities of (many) constituents are known, grouping, read across, and mixture toxicity modeling represent complementary approaches to overcome data gaps in toxicity assessment. This review highlights continued needs for concerted efforts from all stakeholders to ensure proper assessment and sound management of UVCBs.

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