4.1 Review

Analysis of dermal exposure assessment in the US Environmental Protection Agency Toxic Substances Control Act risk evaluations of chemical manufacturing

Journal

TOXICOLOGY AND INDUSTRIAL HEALTH
Volume 39, Issue 1, Pages 49-65

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/07482337221140946

Keywords

dermal exposure; exposure assessment; Toxic Substances Control Act; regulatory risk assessment; exposure modeling

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This study assessed the occupational dermal exposure assessment methods used in several TSCA risk evaluations and found that the current modeling approach may overestimate the total dermal absorbed doses for chlorinated chemical manufacturing and feedstock use scenarios. The best-practice recommendations support a tiered, integrated approach to dermal exposure assessment that emphasizes collecting qualitative data and using validated models aligned with current industrial practices. Collaboration among industry, EPA, and other stakeholders is encouraged to develop a standard approach to exposure assessment under TSCA.
The United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) regulates chemical manufacture, import, processing, distribution, use, and disposal under the 20 I 6 amended Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA) for the purposes of protecting the public and sensitive populations-including workers-from chemical exposure risk. The publication of several TSCA risk evaluations provided a unique opportunity to evaluate the evolving regulatory approach for assessing the dermal exposure pathway in occupational settings. In this analysis, the occupational dermal exposure assessment methods employed in several TSCA risk evaluations were assessed. Specifically, a methodology review was conducted for the occupational dermal scenarios of manufacturing and feedstock use in the risk evaluations of three chlorinated organic chemicals: trichloroethylene, carbon tetrachloride, and perchloroethylene. Additionally, alternative exposure estimates were generated using the exposure model IH SkinPerm (TM). The review and alternative exposure analyses indicate that the current TSCA modeling approach may generate total dermal absorbed doses for chlorinated chemical manufacturing and feedstock use scenarios that are 2- to 20-fold higher than those generated by IH SkinPerm. Best-practice recommendations developed in the methodology review support a tiered, integrated approach to dermal exposure assessment that emphasizes collecting qualitative data, employing validated, peer-reviewed models that align with current industrial practices, and gathering empirical sampling data where needed. Collaboration among industry, EPA, and other stakeholders to share information and develop a standard approach to exposure assessment under TSCA would improve the methodological rigor of, and increase confidence in, the risk evaluation results.

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