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1.
Food Chem Toxicol ; 138: 111223, 2020 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32088251

ABSTRACT

Mixtures of substances to which humans are exposed may lead to cumulative exposure and health effects. To study their effects, it is first necessary to identify a cumulative assessment group (CAG) of substances for risk assessment or hazard testing. Excluding substances from consideration before there is sufficient evidence may underestimate the risk. Conversely, including everything and treating the inevitable uncertainties using conservative assumptions is inefficient and may overestimate the risk, with an unknown level of protection. An efficient, transparent strategy is described to retain a large group, quantifying the uncertainty of group membership and other uncertainties. Iterative refinement of the CAG then focuses on adding information for the substances with high probability of contributing significantly to the risk. Probabilities can be estimated using expert opinion or derived from data on substance properties. An example is presented with 100 pesticides, in which the retain step identified a single substance to target refinement. Using an updated hazard characterisation for this substance reduced the mean exposure estimate from 0.43 to 0.28 µg kg-bw-1 day-1 and reduced the 99.99th percentile exposure from 24.9 to 5.1 µg kg-bw-1 day-1. Other retained substances contributed little to the risk estimates, even after accounting for uncertainty.


Subject(s)
Food Contamination/analysis , Pesticides/analysis , Environmental Exposure , Environmental Monitoring , Humans , Risk Assessment , Uncertainty
2.
Food Chem Toxicol ; 79: 54-64, 2015 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25688423

ABSTRACT

Risk assessments for human exposures to plant protection products (PPPs) have traditionally focussed on single routes of exposure and single compounds. Extensions to estimate aggregate (multi-source) and cumulative (multi-compound) exposure from PPPs present many new challenges and additional uncertainties that should be addressed as part of risk analysis and decision-making. A general approach is outlined for identifying and classifying the relevant uncertainties and variabilities. The implementation of uncertainty analysis within the MCRA software, developed as part of the EU-funded ACROPOLIS project to address some of these uncertainties, is demonstrated. An example is presented for dietary and non-dietary exposures to the triazole class of compounds. This demonstrates the chaining of models, linking variability and uncertainty generated from an external model for bystander exposure with variability and uncertainty in MCRA dietary exposure assessments. A new method is also presented for combining pesticide usage survey information with limited residue monitoring data, to address non-detect uncertainty. The results show that incorporating usage information reduces uncertainty in parameters of the residue distribution but that in this case quantifying uncertainty is not a priority, at least for UK grown crops. A general discussion of alternative approaches to treat uncertainty, either quantitatively or qualitatively, is included.


Subject(s)
Diet/adverse effects , Environmental Exposure/adverse effects , Food Contamination , Models, Statistical , Pesticide Residues/toxicity , Pesticides/toxicity , Triazoles/toxicity , Adult , Air Pollutants, Occupational/toxicity , Crops, Agricultural/growth & development , Daucus carota/growth & development , Diet Surveys , Environmental Monitoring , Farmers , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Occupational Exposure/adverse effects , Plant Roots/growth & development , Risk Assessment , Uncertainty , United Kingdom , Young Adult
3.
Food Chem Toxicol ; 79: 32-44, 2015 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25280924

ABSTRACT

Exposures to plant protection products (PPPs) are assessed using risk analysis methods to protect public health. Traditionally, single sources, such as food or individual occupational sources, have been addressed. In reality, individuals can be exposed simultaneously to multiple sources. Improved regulation therefore requires the development of new tools for estimating the population distribution of exposures aggregated within an individual. A new aggregate model is described, which allows individual users to include as much, or as little, information as is available or relevant for their particular scenario. Depending on the inputs provided by the user, the outputs can range from simple deterministic values through to probabilistic analyses including characterisations of variability and uncertainty. Exposures can be calculated for multiple compounds, routes and sources of exposure. The aggregate model links to the cumulative dietary exposure model developed in parallel and is implemented in the web-based software tool MCRA. Case studies are presented to illustrate the potential of this model, with inputs drawn from existing European data sources and models. These cover exposures to UK arable spray operators, Italian vineyard spray operators, Netherlands users of a consumer spray and UK bystanders/residents. The model could also be adapted to handle non-PPP compounds.


Subject(s)
Diet/adverse effects , Environmental Exposure/adverse effects , Food Contamination , Health Plan Implementation , Models, Statistical , Pesticide Residues/toxicity , Pesticides/toxicity , Adult , Child , Child, Preschool , Ecotoxicology/methods , European Union , Female , Guidelines as Topic , Health Surveys , Humans , Internet , Male , Middle Aged , Monte Carlo Method , Occupational Exposure/adverse effects , Risk Assessment/standards , Software , Young Adult
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