Shipp A M, Gentry P R, Lawrence G, Van Landingham C, Covington T, Clewell H J, Gribben K, Crump K
The K.S. Crump Group, Inc., ICF Consulting, Ruston, Louisiana 71270, USA.
Toxicol Ind Health. 2000 Nov;16(9-10):335-438. doi: 10.1177/074823370001600901.
Environmental risk-management decisions in the U.S. involving potential exposures to methylmercury currently use a reference dose (RfD) developed by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA). This RfD is based on retrospective studies of an acute poisoning incident in Iraq in which grain contaminated with a methylmercury fungicide was inadvertently used in the baking of bread. The exposures, which were relatively high but lasted only a few months, were associated with neurological effects in both adults (primarily paresthesia) and infants (late walking, late talking, etc.). It is generally believed that the developing fetus represents a particularly sensitive subpopulation for the neurological effects of methylmercury. The USEPA derived an RfD of 0.1 microg/kg/day based on benchmark dose (BMD) modeling of the combined neurological endpoints reported for children exposed in utero. This RfD included an uncertainty factor of 10 to consider human pharmacokinetic variability and database limitations (lack of data on multigeneration effects or possible long-term sequelae of perinatal exposure). Alcoa signed an Administrative Order of Consent for the conduct of a remedial investigation/feasibility study (RI/FS) at their Point Comfort Operations and the adjacent Lavaca Bay in Texas to address the effects of historical discharges of mercury-containing wastewater. In cooperation with the Texas Natural Resource Conservation Commission and USEPA Region VI, Alcoa conducted a baseline risk assessment to assess potential risk to human health and the environment. As a part of this assessment. Alcoa pursued the development of a site-specific RfD for methylmercury to specifically address the potential human health effects associated with the ingestion of contaminated finfish and shellfish from Lavaca Bay. Application of the published USEPA RfD to this site is problematic; while the study underlying the RfD represented acute exposure to relatively high concentrations of methylmercury, the exposures of concern for the Point Comfort site are from the chronic consumption of relatively low concentrations of methylmercury in fish. Since the publication of the USEPA RfD, several analyses of chronic exposure to methylmercury in fish-eating populations have been reported. The purpose of the analysis reported here was to evaluate the possibility of deriving an RfD for methylmercury, specifically for the case of fish ingestion, on the basis of these new studies. In order to better support the risk-management decisions associated with developing a remediation approach for the site in question, the analysis was designed to provide information on the distribution of acceptable ingestion rates across a population, which could reasonably be expected to be consistent with the results of the epidemiological studies of other fish-eating populations. Based on a review of the available literature on the effects of methylmercury, a study conducted with a population in the Seychelles Islands was selected as the critical study for this analysis. The exposures to methylmercury in this population result from chronic, multigenerational ingestion of contaminated fish. This prospective study was carefully conducted and analyzed, included a large cohort of mother-infant pairs, and was relatively free of confounding factors. The results of this study are essentially negative, and a no-observed-adverse-effect level (NOAEL) derived from the estimated exposures has recently been used by the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR) as the basis for a chronic oral minimal risk level (MRL) for methylmercury. In spite of the fact that no statistically significant effects were observed in this study, the data as reported are suitable for dose-response analysis using the BMD method. Evaluation of the BMD method used in this analysis, as well as in the current USEPA RfD, has demonstrated that the resulting 95% lower bound on the 10% benchmark dose (BMDL) represents a conservative estimate of the traditional NOAEL, and that it is superior to the use of "average" or "grouped" exposure estimates when dose-response information is available, as is the case for the Seychelles study. A more recent study in the Faroe Islands, which did report statistically significant associations between methylmercury exposure and neurological effects, could not be used for dose-response modeling due to inadequate reporting of the data and confounding from co-exposure to polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs). BMD modeling over the wide range of neurological endpoints reported in the Seychelles study yielded a lowest BMDL for methylmercury in maternal hair of 21 ppm. This BMDL was then converted to an expected distribution of daily ingestion rates across a population using Monte Carlo analysis with a physiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) model to evaluate the impact of interindividual variability. The resulting distribution of ingestion rates at the BMDL had a geometric mean of 1.60 microg/kg/day with a geometric standard deviation of 1.33; the 1st, 5th, and 10th percentiles of the distribution were 0.86, 1.04, and 1.15 microg/kg/day. In place of the use of an uncertainty factor of 3 for pharmacokinetic variability, as is done in the current RfD, one of these lower percentiles of the daily ingestion rate distribution provides a scientifically based, conservative basis for taking into consideration the impact of pharmacokinetic variability across the population. On the other hand, it was felt that an uncertainty factor of 3 for database limitations should be used in the current analysis. Although there can be high confidence in the benchmark-estimated NOAEL of 21 ppm in the Seychelles study, some results in the New Zealand and Faroe Islands studies could be construed to suggest the possibility of effects at maternal hair concentrations below 10 ppm. In addition, while concerns regarding the possibility of chronic sequelae are not supported by the available data, neither can they be absolutely ruled out. The use of an uncertainty factor of 3 is equivalent to using a NOAEL of 7 ppm in maternal hair, which provides additional protection against the possibility that effects could occur at lower concentrations in some populations. Based on the analysis described above, the distribution of acceptable daily ingestion rates (RfDs) recommended to serve as the basis for site-specific risk-management decisions at Alcoa's Point Comfort Operations ranges from approximately 0.3 to 1.1 microg/kg/day, with a population median (50th percentile) of 0.5 microg/kg/day. By analogy with USEPA guidelines for the use of percentiles in applications of distributions in exposure assessments, the 10th percentile provides a reasonably conservative measure. On this basis, a site-specific RfD of 0.4 microg/kg/day is recommended.
美国涉及潜在甲基汞暴露的环境风险管理决策目前采用美国环境保护局(USEPA)制定的参考剂量(RfD)。该RfD基于对伊拉克一起急性中毒事件的回顾性研究,在该事件中,被甲基汞杀菌剂污染的谷物被无意中用于面包烘焙。这些暴露相对较高,但仅持续了几个月,与成人(主要是感觉异常)和婴儿(走路晚、说话晚等)的神经效应有关。一般认为,发育中的胎儿是甲基汞神经效应特别敏感的亚人群。USEPA根据对子宫内暴露儿童报告的综合神经终点进行的基准剂量(BMD)建模得出RfD为0.1微克/千克/天。该RfD包括一个10的不确定性因子,以考虑人体药代动力学变异性和数据库局限性(缺乏多代效应数据或围产期暴露可能的长期后遗症数据)。美国铝业公司签署了一份同意令,对其位于得克萨斯州普因特康福特运营区及邻近的拉瓦卡湾进行补救调查/可行性研究(RI/FS),以解决含汞废水历史排放的影响。美国铝业公司与得克萨斯州自然资源保护委员会和USEPA第六区域合作,进行了基线风险评估,以评估对人类健康和环境的潜在风险。作为该评估的一部分,美国铝业公司致力于制定特定场地的甲基汞RfD,以具体解决与食用拉瓦卡湾受污染的有鳍鱼类和贝类相关的潜在人类健康影响。将已发布的USEPA RfD应用于该场地存在问题;虽然RfD所依据的研究代表了对相对高浓度甲基汞的急性暴露,但普因特康福特场地关注的暴露来自长期食用相对低浓度鱼类中的甲基汞。自USEPA RfD发布以来,已有多项关于食鱼人群慢性甲基汞暴露的分析报告。此处报告的分析目的是根据这些新研究评估得出甲基汞RfD的可能性,特别是针对鱼类摄入的情况。为了更好地支持与为相关场地制定补救方法相关的风险管理决策,该分析旨在提供关于人群中可接受摄入率分布的信息,合理预期该分布与其他食鱼人群的流行病学研究结果一致。基于对甲基汞影响的现有文献综述,选择了在塞舌尔群岛人群中进行的一项研究作为该分析的关键研究。该人群中的甲基汞暴露源于长期、多代食用受污染的鱼类。这项前瞻性研究经过精心实施和分析,包括大量母婴对,且相对没有混杂因素干扰。该研究结果基本为阴性,美国有毒物质和疾病登记处(ATSDR)最近将根据估计暴露得出的未观察到有害作用水平(NOAEL)用作甲基汞慢性口服最低风险水平(MRL)的依据。尽管在该研究中未观察到统计学上显著影响,但所报告的数据适用于使用BMD方法进行剂量反应分析。对本分析以及当前USEPA RfD中使用的BMD方法的评估表明,所得10%基准剂量(BMDL)的95%下限代表了传统NOAEL的保守估计,并且当有剂量反应信息时,如塞舌尔研究的情况,它优于使用“平均”或“分组”暴露估计。法罗群岛的一项较新研究确实报告了甲基汞暴露与神经效应之间的统计学显著关联,但由于数据报告不充分以及与多氯联苯(PCBs)共同暴露造成的混杂,无法用于剂量反应建模。对塞舌尔研究中报告的广泛神经终点进行BMD建模得出,孕妇头发中甲基汞的最低BMDL为21 ppm。然后使用基于生理的药代动力学(PBPK)模型通过蒙特卡罗分析将该BMDL转换为人群中每日摄入率的预期分布,以评估个体间变异性的影响。在BMDL水平下摄入率的所得分布几何均值为1.60微克/千克/天,几何标准差为l.33;该分布的第1、第5和第10百分位数分别为0.86、1.04和1.15微克/千克/天。与当前RfD中对药代动力学变异性使用3的不确定性因子不同,每日摄入率分布的这些较低百分位数之一为考虑人群中药代动力学变异性的影响提供了基于科学的保守依据。另一方面,认为在当前分析中应使用3的不确定性因子来考虑数据库局限性。尽管对塞舌尔研究中基准估计的21 ppm的NOAEL有高度信心,但新西兰和法罗群岛研究中的一些结果可以解释为表明孕妇头发浓度低于10 ppm时可能存在影响。此外,虽然现有数据不支持对慢性后遗症可能性的担忧,但也不能完全排除。使用3的不确定性因子相当于使用孕妇头发中7 ppm的NOAEL,这为防止某些人群在较低浓度下可能出现影响提供了额外保护。基于上述分析,建议作为美国铝业公司普因特康福特运营区特定场地风险管理决策基础的可接受每日摄入率(RfD)分布范围约为0.3至1.1微克/千克/天,人群中位数(第50百分位数)为0.5微克/千克/天。根据USEPA在暴露评估中应用分布时使用百分位数的指南类推,第10百分位数提供了一个合理保守的度量。在此基础上,建议特定场地的RfD为0.4微克/千克/天。