Science Inventory

IRIS Toxicological Review of Benzene (Noncancer Effects)

Citation:

U.S. EPA. IRIS Toxicological Review of Benzene (Noncancer Effects). U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Research and Development, National Center for Environmental Assessment, Washington Office, Washington, DC, EPA/635/R-02/001F, 2002.

Description:

Benzene, also known as benzol, is widely used as an industrial solvent, as an intermediate in chemical syntheses, and as a component of gasoline; hence, the potential for human exposure is great. The emphasis of this document is a discussion of the noncancer adverse health effects of benzene including the no-observed-adverse-effect levels, the lowest-observed-adverse-effect levels, benchmark dose analysis, uncertainty factors, and any other considerations used to develop the reference dose (RfD) and reference concentration (RfC) for benzene.

The Toxicological Review concludes that chronic benzene exposure may pose several types of noncancer human health hazards. Hematotoxicity, e.g., progressive deterioration of hematopoietic function, has been consistently reported to be the most sensitive indicator of noncancer toxicity in both experimental animal studies and occupationally exposed humans. The hazards can result from inhalation, oral or dermal exposure, though the exposure circumstances vary. The Toxicological Review includes estimates of chronic exposure levels for oral exposure (RfD) and inhalation exposure (RfC) that are thought to be without appreciable risk.

URLs/Downloads:

FR NOTICE: APRIL 16, 2003   Exit EPA's Web Site

IRIS Summary of Benzene (Noncancer Effects)  (PDF, 22 pp,  1358  KB,  about PDF)

Toxicological Review of Benzene (Noncancer Effects)  (PDF, 182 pp,  1767  KB,  about PDF)

Benzene - Fact Sheet  (PDF, 2 pp,  116  KB,  about PDF)

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( IRIS ASSESSMENT)
Product Published Date:06/11/2002
Record Last Revised:10/17/2019
Record ID: 51760