4.8 Article

Trigger values for investigation of hormonal activity in drinking water and its sources using CALUX bioassays

Journal

ENVIRONMENT INTERNATIONAL
Volume 55, Issue -, Pages 109-118

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envint.2013.02.003

Keywords

Estrogens; Endocrine disrupting compounds; Androgens; Glucocorticoids; Progestogens; In vitro bioassays

Funding

  1. BTO [B111742]
  2. KWR Watercycle Research Institute [O710020]

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To screen for hormonal activity in water samples, highly sensitive in vitro CALUX bioassays are available which allow detection of estrogenic (ER alpha), androgenic (AR), progestagenic (PR), and glucocorticoid (GR) activities. This paper presents trigger values for the ER alpha, AR, PR, and GR CALUX bioassays for agonistic hormonal activities in (drinking) water, which define a level above which human health risk cannot be waived alpha priori and additional examination of specific endocrine activity may be warranted. The trigger values are based on 1) acceptable or tolerable daily intake (ADI/TDI) values of specific compounds, 2) pharmacokinetic factors defining their bioavailability, 3) estimations of the bioavailability of unknown compounds with equivalent hormonal activity, 4) relative endocrine potencies, and 5) physiological, and drinking water allocation factors. As a result, trigger values of 3.8 ng 17 beta-estradiol (E2)-equivalents (eq)/L, 11 ng dihydrotestosterone (DHT)-eq/L, 21 ng dexamethasone (DEX)-eq/L, and 333 ng Org2058-eq/L were derived. Benchmark Quotient (BQ) values were derived by dividing hormonal activity in water samples by the derived trigger using the highest concentrations detected in a recent, limited screening of Dutch water samples, and were in the order of (value) AR (0.41) > ER alpha (0.13) > GR (0.06) > PR (0.04). The application of trigger values derived in the present study can help to judge measured agonistic hormonal activities in water samples using the CALUX bioassays and help to decide whether further examination of specific endocrine activity followed by a subsequent safety evaluation may be warranted, or whether concentrations of such activity are of low priority with respect to health concerns in the human population. For instance, at one specific drinking water production site ER alpha and AR (but no GR and PR) activities were detected in drinking water, however, these levels are at least a factor 83 smaller than the respective trigger values, and therefore no human health risks are to be expected from hormonal activity in Dutch drinking water from this site. (C) 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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