Science Inventory

Basic principles of human health risk assessment for environmental chemical mixtures with a focus on estimating risks from hydrocarbon mixtures

Citation:

Pratt, M. Basic principles of human health risk assessment for environmental chemical mixtures with a focus on estimating risks from hydrocarbon mixtures. Superfund Research Program (SRP) at Oregon State University RESEARCH in ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH SCIENCES SEMINAR SERIES, Corvallis, OR, May 06, 2022.

Impact/Purpose:

Information will be presented virtually to the Research in Environmental Health Sciences Seminar Series at Oregon State Univerisity to an audience that includes faculty, trainees, and staff. The seminar series focuses on research areas related to environmental health sciences in the Pacific Northwest. Oregon State University is home to a Superfund Reasearch Program that is focused on Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons. The presentation will provide an overview of the approaches described in EPA's Chemical Mixtures Guidance and will present examples involving hydrocarbon mixtures, including the PAH RPF Approach as described in the 2010 SAB review draft as well as the fraction approach described in the 2009 document, PPRTVs for Complex Mixtures of Aliphatic and Aromatic Hydrocarbons.

Description:

Chemical risk assessments follow a multistep paradigm that involves identifying hazards associated with exposure to a chemical and developing quantitative dose-response information that, when combined with exposure information, is used to characterize risk and inform risk management decisions. Evaluating human health risk from exposure to mixtures rather than individual chemicals adds another level of complexity to this process. EPA’s Mixtures Guidance defines a chemical mixture as “any combination of two or more chemical substances regardless of source or of spatial or temporal proximity” and presents approaches for assessing the risks from chemical mixtures that depend on the nature of the available data. Information on the specific whole mixture of concern or a similar mixture are preferred, but frequently such data are not available. Component approaches are a third, commonly used option that allows for utilization of data on the individual components of a mixture in a process that is informed by what is known about the similarities of the mixture components. Further, a fraction-based approach consistent with EPA’s Mixtures Guidance addresses concerns regarding the effects of weathering and defines petroleum hydrocarbon fractions on the basis of expected transport in the environment and analytical methods used to identify and quantify such environmental contaminants. For petroleum hydrocarbon fractions, the fraction-based approach has been utilized to generate Provisional Peer-Reviewed Toxicity Values (PPRTVs), which are primarily derived for use by EPA’s Superfund Program. This presentation will provide an overview of approaches for estimating health risk from chemical mixtures with greater attention being given to hydrocarbon mixtures. Examples to be discussed in greater detail include estimating cancer risks from exposure to PAH mixtures using a component approach and use of a fraction approach for derivation of PPRTVs for complex mixtures of aliphatic and aromatic hydrocarbons. The views expressed are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views or policies of the US EPA.

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( PRESENTATION/ ABSTRACT)
Product Published Date:05/06/2022
Record Last Revised:11/04/2022
OMB Category:Other
Record ID: 356077