Beyond the RfD: Broad application of a probabilistic approach to improve chemical dose-response assessments for noncancer effects

Chiu, WA; Axelrad, DA; Dalaijamts, C; Dockins, C; Shao, K; Shapiro, AJ; Paoli, G

HERO ID

4811402

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2018

Language

English

PMID

29968566

HERO ID 4811402
In Press No
Year 2018
Title Beyond the RfD: Broad application of a probabilistic approach to improve chemical dose-response assessments for noncancer effects
Authors Chiu, WA; Axelrad, DA; Dalaijamts, C; Dockins, C; Shao, K; Shapiro, AJ; Paoli, G
Journal Environmental Health Perspectives
Volume 126
Issue 6
Page Numbers Article #067009
Abstract <strong>BACKGROUND: </strong>The National Academies recommended risk assessments redefine the traditional noncancer Reference Dose (RfD) as a probabilistically derived risk-specific dose, a framework for which was recently developed by the World Health Organization (WHO).<br /><br /><strong>OBJECTIVES: </strong>Our aim was to assess the feasibility and implications of replacing traditional RfDs with probabilistic estimates of the human dose associated with an effect magnitude M and population incidence I (HDMI).<br /><br /><strong>METHODS: </strong>We created a comprehensive, curated database of RfDs derived from animal data and developed a standardized, automated, web-accessible probabilistic dose-response workflow implementing the WHO framework.<br /><br /><strong>RESULTS: </strong>We identified 1,464 RfDs and associated endpoints, representing 608 chemicals across many types of effects. Applying our standardized workflow resulted in 1,522 HDMI values. Traditional RfDs are generally within an order of magnitude of the HDMI lower confidence bound for I=1% and M values commonly used for benchmark doses. The greatest contributor to uncertainty was lack of benchmark dose estimates, followed by uncertainty in the extent of human variability. Exposure at the traditional RfD frequently implies an upper 95% confidence bound of several percent of the population affected. Whether such incidences are considered acceptable is likely to vary by chemical and risk context, especially given the wide range of severity of the associated effects, from clinical chemistry to mortality.<br /><br /><strong>CONCLUSIONS: </strong>Overall, replacing RfDs with HDMI estimates can provide a more consistent, scientifically rigorous, and transparent basis for risk management decisions, as well as support additional decision contexts such as economic benefit-cost analysis, risk-risk tradeoffs, life-cycle impact analysis, and emergency response. https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP3368.
Doi 10.1289/EHP3368
Pmid 29968566
Wosid WOS:000438820100012
Url https://ehp.niehs.nih.gov/doi/abs/10.1289/EHP3368
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
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