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Selected Silver Book Highlights and Update on Related Activities

Selected Silver Book Highlights and Update on Related Activities. Gary Ginsberg Toxicologist Connecticut Dept of Public Health. Challenges to Risk Assessment 25 Years After the Red Book. Precautionary Principle. Cost Benefit. Human Health Risk Assessment. Emerging Technologies.

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Selected Silver Book Highlights and Update on Related Activities

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  1. Selected Silver Book Highlights and Update on Related Activities Gary Ginsberg Toxicologist Connecticut Dept of Public Health

  2. Challenges to Risk Assessment 25 Years After the Red Book Precautionary Principle Cost Benefit HumanHealth Risk Assessment Emerging Technologies The 2 Silos Multiple Chemicals The dioxin syndrome

  3. SCIENCE AND DECISIONS: ADVANCING RISK ASSESSMENT National Research Council Committee on Improving Risk Analysis Approaches Used by EPA Board on Environmental Studies and Toxicology

  4. Report Overview • Make RA more solutions oriented, decision-based • Uncertainty and Variability • Unification of cancer and non-cancer RA • New definition of RfD • Low dose linear approach for non-carcinogens • Variability into cancer RA • Defaults • Hidden default of zero risk for chems with little data • Community risk –combined effects of diff stressors

  5. Risk Policy Report, Vol. 17, No. 37 - September 14, 2010 Guest Perspective The NRC Silver Book: The Case for Improving Non-Cancer Risk Assessment Gary Ginsberg, Connecticut Dept of Public Health, Hartford CT, Jonathan Levy, Harvard School of Public Health, CambridgeMA, A. John Bailer, Miami University, Oxford OH and Lauren Zeise, California EPA, Oakland CA What’s Broken in Risk Assessment? Two silos – Cancer vs. Non-Cancer The Fix? One Unifying Framework Will it make regulation more complex? Will it make regulations too stringent? Is it consistent with the underlying science?

  6. Factors that Contribute to Risk Community Factors Host Factors Chemical Exp Housing Medical Care Education Stress Genetics, Age Lifestyle, Disease Air, water, soil, consumer prod, food Cumulative Risk Disease??

  7. Do the 2 silos help RA address variability and uncertainty? tidy constructs, functional but imperfect representations

  8. Easy to define “safe” dose – RfD or RfC Uncertainty factors Yes / No answer Not useful for cost/benefit No “safe” dose No uncertainty factors Risk is a continuum to very low dose Probability of risk useful for cost/benefit Threshold vs Non-Threshold

  9. PM10 and Mortality in 20 US Cities Daniels, et al. Amer J Epi 2000

  10. Unified Approach for Cancer and Non-Cancer • Not based upon precaution • Not making everything a carcinogen • Not blowing up the RfD ================================= • Organize around likelihood for threshold • MOA • Interaction with background dx, exposure • Variability and vulnerability in pop • Create a probability of risk for all endpoints • Where practical • Create framework better for cumulative risk

  11. Conceptual Model 1 Linear at the Population Level • Threshold exists at individual level • Threshold different for different people • As increase dose, recruit in the more resistant • At population level, no threshold • Even tiny doses have some finite risk • More likely if already a significant background risk • Intersection with aging or disease process • Interaction with similarly acting agents • Interaction with unique host vulnerability factors • Possibility for a separate assessment for subgroups • Examples: PM, mercury, lead, ozone, arsenic • Analytical approach – linear slope at low dose that can be shallower than at high dose

  12. RfD

  13. RfD General Pop Affected Vulnerable Affected

  14. Conceptual Model 2 Threshold Both Individual & Pop • Chemical MOA not mutagenic • Toxicity can be quenched • Defense, repair, homeostatic mechs • Chemical not adding to background exp or dx • Alachlor-induced hemolytic anemia • Xenon-induced asphyxia • Exposure levels below threshold across pop • Background exposures, conditions, risk factors not boosting the dose response • Analyze by distributions for each uncertainty • Probability for harm

  15. Conceptual Model 3 Linear at Individual Level • Mutagens • Probability of DNA damage, oncogene activation even at low dose • Ozone? • Probability that some percentage of dose effective even at very low doses within range of human exposure • High / low dose slopes not necessarily the same • Methods suggested for bringing variability into linear low dose assessment

  16. Redefined RfD • Not a bright line yes/no answer • Dose assoc with some probability of harm • Defines the risk at a given reference dose • E.G., May be defined as • Dose that with 95% confidence confers 1 in 1000 risk for a particular endpoint • Acceptable level of risk could depend upon severity of endpoint

  17. Upstream Biomarkers and Thresholds • Often a continuous variable • Birth wt, sperm count, pulmonary fn, blood pressure, IQ points, TH levels, omics • Can be concerned about slight shifts in the distribution even within the normal range • Threshold? Possibly not if key biomarker • Threshold applies if you can document a dose in the population below which there is no shift in the underlying distribution • Including susceptible pops

  18. Threshold on Pop Level More Likely if: • The pop distribution lies far from the clinical disease point • Vulnerable subpopulations don’t exist • Background dx rate is low or rare • Chemical doesn’t contribute to something already in the pop • There are no interacting background exposures • Examples of chem interaction • Ozone and PM, other irritants and oxidants • Mercury – organic and inorganic • Pesticides • Phthalates • Interactions at ER and AhR

  19. Linear Low Dose Concepts • Increasing risk with increasing dose • Not necessarily the same slope as at high dose • Possible to have curvilinear high dose and linear low dose • Not all agents should be modeled linear low dose • Interaction with background dx or aging process? • Interaction with other chemical exposures?

  20. So What if there is a threshold at some very low dose …. If…. • Within the range of common human exposure can’t demonstrate a threshold • PM • Ozone • Hg • Pb • Phthalates • PCBs • Perchlorate • BPA • Arsenic • Implication: low enviro levels of these agents cause or contribute via interaction with other factors

  21. Toxic Chemicals May Interact with Disease Process Carcinogens  Cancer PM  CardioPulm Dx Mercury  CV disease Pb  Attention Deficit TCE  Autoimmune Dx Arsenic  Diabetes Early Estrogens  Obesity Ozone  Asthma Benign?? / Contributory?? / Causative??

  22. Application of Silver Book Concepts for Low Dose Linear • Pick low hanging fruit (e.g. Pb, Hg, Ozone) • Develop a low dose slope from which the protectiveness of RfD can be explored • How different is high dose and low dose slope? • Is it better to address as separate subpops • Explore other low dose slope approaches • Actual Epi data • Cancer model – POD to zero linear • Background additivity model • Variability (signal to noise model)

  23. Exploring Interaction with Background Dx/Aging Processes • Collaborate with medical researchers • What are key upsteam events and risk biomarkers for diabetes, ht dx, kidney dx, hypothyroid, cancer, etc. • Does the chemical hit these events? • Epi evidence of chemical ↑ing dx risk • Animal models of the human dx to test dose response? • TCE and mouse autoimmune model • Griffin et al 2000; Blossom et al 2007

  24. Variability Model to Address Signal-to-Noise Issues • Variability in large pop can create linear low dose • Variability across a small pop can bury it • Is there a low dose slope buried the noise? • Signal to noise crossover dose not yet reached but doesn’t mean no signal • Develop plausible bound on this low dose slope • Statistical limit – e.g., 95% LCL on control response to 95% UCL on low dose response • Constrained by high dose slope • Variability by itself won’t create linear low dose

  25. Variability Burying Low Dose Slope in Small Pops • Animal evidence – Festing et al. • Strain diffs in CAP hematological response • Outbred strains insensitive • Human evidence – Huang and Ghio 2009 • Summary of controlled PM studies in cardiopulmonary patients • Diminished responses relative to healthy subjects • Too much variability in the small groups tested • Impaired and variable baseline values makes it difficult to see an effect • May need to focus on a narrower subpop- more severe patients

  26. CD-1 Festing et al 2001

  27. Background Additivity Model • If there is background rate of toxic effect (e.g. dx, oxidative stress, ER binding) • Convert background to chem “Effective” dose • If 10 mg/kg/d causes 30% increase in urinary Beta2-microglobulin excretion • And 60 yr old men have 10% increase, then the starting dose in a 60 yr old man is 5 mg/kg/d • If exposure in drinking water is at 0.1 mg/kg/d his overall dose is 5.1 mg/kg/d • Risk @ 5.1 mg/kg/d – Risk 5.0 mg/kg/d = Risk associated with drinking water at 0.1 mg/kg/d

  28. Hattis et al. 2009 – Analysis of TCDD Low Dose Risk

  29. Hattis et al. 2009 – Analysis of TCDD Low Dose Risk Effect of an Interacting Background on the Incremental Risks of Various Lifetime Dose Rates of TCDD 1% of US Background Rate of Cholangiosarcoma Assumed Relevant (1.9E-05)

  30. Combined Exposures • How many kids in top 10th % for Pb, As, Hg, PCBs, Perchlorate • Theoretically 0.15 (0.001%) of population or 1 in 100,000 • Biomonitoring with a purpose • Similar considerations for anti-thyroid agents, pesticides, endocrine disruptors • House dust a key source for children • Phthalates • PFOA/PFOS • Lead

  31. Useful Case Studies • Ozone and airway response • Methyl and Inorganic Mercury • Fish and amalgam exposure • Arsenic and neurodevelopment • Binding to estrogen receptor

  32. Ozone and Low Dose Linearity • Direct effects – some % O3 escapes antioxidant defenses even at low dose • 1 ppt = 11 trillion molecules /hr • Collateral effects – quenched O3 ↓s antioxidant defenses even at low dose • Additive to background asthma • Endogenous ozone poss during inflammation • Large variability in threshold in population

  33. % Effective Dose Related to Ozone Antioxidant Capacity in URT • Greater at high dose than low • Overcome antioxidant defenses • Still could have linear low dose slope • Some ozone at low dose can escape defenses • Define here as % O3 escaping URT lining fluid • Baseline, low breathing rate– 17.5% • Ultman et al. • Measured OZAC in nasal lavage – 2 subjects • Generate ozone in cuvette • Dye bleached – color change correlates with O3 • If antioxidants present – less color change • Approx 2 mM OZAC in undiluted nasal lining fluid

  34. Ultman et al. • OZAC depletion by O3 leads to greater ED • Exposed subjects to 0.36 ppm x 30 min • Went from 17.5 to 28.8% ED • Approx 37% depletion of OZAC • Should have been 100% in 8.9 mins • OZAC repletion must be occurring • Run simple one compartment model to backfit OZAC repletion rate

  35. Inspired Ozone (0.36 ppm) 2 mM OZAC Nasal Lining Fluid URT Ozone loss = K*CO3*COZAC OZAC depletion = Ozone loss OZAC repletion = backfit 10 micron 0.16 ml LRT Effective Dose

  36. Bell et al. EHP 114: 532-536, 2006 Ozone and Mortality Data from 96 Cities

  37. Brown et al. EHP 2008

  38. Shore et al. J Appl Phys 95: 938-945 2003

  39. Mercury: Why Carp on Cavities? • Some fish contain methylHg of concern • Effects partially balanced by O-3 FAs • Dental amalgam: lower dose of Hg (Hg°) • Some epi suggests amalgam safe • More brain Hg in those with amalgams • Below a toxicity threshold? • Dentists – 100x > exposure than gen public • neuro effects occur • How do the amalgam data fit within Silver Book models?

  40. Wasserman et al. 2004 Children’s Arsenic Water Exposure and Intellectual Function in Bangladesh

  41. Wasserman et al. 2004

  42. Estrogen Sensitive Diseases Background chemical and dx additivity • Breast Cancer and Endometriosis • High background, estrogen driven • Pop not doing a good job coping w/E within context of obesity, stress, other carcinogens • Each E dose on pop level plausibly adds some risk • Xenoestrogens may act differently than natural hormone • Xenoestrogens early in life may lead to accentuated response to later estrogen • Estrogens late life – breast cancer and HRT

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