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U.S. EPA Reference Dose/Reference Concentration Methodology: Update on a Review of the Process
Authors:Carole A  Kimmel
Institution:1. National Center for Environmental Assessment (8623D), U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Ariel Rios Bldg., 1200 Pennsylvania Ave., NW, Washington, DC 20460;2. Tel: 202-564-3307;3. fax: 202-565-0050;4. email: kimmel.carole@epa.gov.
Abstract:The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) has been reviewing several approaches to testing and risk assessment related to implementation of the Food Quality Protection Act (FQPA) and the Amendments to the Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA), both signed into law in 1996. Based on recommendations from a review of issues related to children's health protection under these laws, the USEPA established the RfD Technical Panel to evaluate in depth the current reference dose (RfD) and reference concentration (RfC) process in general, and in particular with respect to how well children and other potentially sensitive subpopulations are protected. The RfD Technical Panel also was asked to consider scientific issues that have become of greater concern in RfD and RfC derivation (e.g., neurotoxicity, immunotoxicity), and to raise issues that should be explored or developed further for application in the RfD/RfC process. This paper provides the current status of the activities of the RfD Technical Panel. The Technical Panel has recommended that acute, short- term, and intermediate reference values should be set for chemicals, where possible, and that these values should be incorporated into the USEPA's Integrated Risk Information System (IRIS) Database. A review of current testing procedures is underway, including the endpoints assessed, life stages covered by exposure and outcome evaluation, and information that can be derived from current protocols on various durations of exposure. Data gaps identified for risk assessment include the types of pharmacokinetic data that should be collected, especially for developmental toxicity studies, the impact of aging on toxic responses occurring after early exposure as well as concomitant with exposure in old age, and information available on latency to response. The implications of the RfD Technical Panel's recommendations for various uncertainty factors are also being explored.
Keywords:reference dose  reference concentration  risk assessment  
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