Rusch George M, Garrett Roger, Tobin Paul, Falke Ernest, Lu Po-Yung
Honeywell, 101 Columbia Rd., Morristown, NJ 07962, USA.
Drug Chem Toxicol. 2002 Nov;25(4):339-48. doi: 10.1081/dct-120014786.
The National Advisory Committee for Acute Exposure Guideline Levels for Hazardous Substances (NAC/AEGL) was created to develop guideline levels for short-term exposures to airborne concentrations for approximately 400-500 high priority, acutely hazardous substances. The program should be completed within the next 10 years. These Acute Exposure Guideline Levels (AEGLs) are being applied to a wide range of planning, response, and prevention applications both within the United States and abroad. The NAC/AEGL Committee seeks to develop the most scientifically credible, acute (short-term) exposure guideline levels possible within the constraints of data availability, resources and time. The program begins with comprehensive data gathering, data evaluation and data summarization. The resulting Technical Support Documents (TSD) are first reviewed by a small review committee; (chemical manager, two chemical reviewers and the author), then by the full AEGL committee. After that review, a summary is published in the Federal Register for Public comment. When these comments have been addressed, the TSDs are sent to the National Research Council's (NRC) Subcommittee on AEGLs for a peer review. Following acceptance by the NRC, they are published by the Academy. The NAC/AEGL Committee currently comprises representatives of federal, state, and local agencies and representatives from France, Germany, and the Netherlands, private industry, medicine, academia and other organizations in the private sector that will derive programmatic or operational benefits from the existence of the AEGL values. AEGL values are determined for three different health effect end-points. These values are intended for the general public where they are applicable to emergency (accidental) situations. Threshold exposure values are developed for five exposure periods (10 and 30 min, 1 h, 4 h, 8 h). Each threshold value is distinguished by varying degrees of severity of toxic effects, as initially conceived by the American Industrial Hygiene Association's Emergency Response Planning Committee, subsequently defined in the NAS' National Research Council publication of the Guideline for Developing Community Emergency Exposure Levels for Hazardous Substances and further categorized in the Standing Operating Procedures of the NAC/AEGL Committee. To date, the committee has reviewed almost 100 chemicals.
国家有害物质急性暴露指导水平咨询委员会(NAC/AEGL)的设立目的是为大约400 - 500种高优先级急性有害物质的短期空气传播浓度制定指导水平。该计划应在未来10年内完成。这些急性暴露指导水平(AEGLs)正在美国国内外广泛应用于各种规划、应对和预防应用中。NAC/AEGL委员会力求在数据可用性、资源和时间的限制范围内,制定出最具科学可信度的急性(短期)暴露指导水平。该计划始于全面的数据收集(gathering)、数据评估和数据汇总。由此产生的技术支持文件(TSD)首先由一个小型审查委员会(化学经理、两名化学评审员和作者)进行审查,然后由AEGL委员会全体成员进行审查。在该审查之后,一份摘要在《联邦公报》上发布以征求公众意见。在这些意见得到处理后,TSD被送交国家研究委员会(NRC)的AEGLs小组委员会进行同行评审。在获得NRC认可后,由学会发布。NAC/AEGL委员会目前由联邦、州和地方机构的代表以及来自法国、德国和荷兰的代表、私营行业、医学、学术界和私营部门的其他组织的代表组成,这些组织将从AEGL值的存在中获得规划或运营方面的益处。AEGL值针对三种不同的健康效应终点进行确定。这些值适用于一般公众,适用于紧急(意外)情况。针对五个暴露时间段(10分钟和30分钟、1小时、4小时、8小时)制定了阈暴露值。每个阈值根据毒性作用的严重程度不同而有所区分,这最初是由美国工业卫生协会应急响应规划委员会构想的,随后在NAS的国家研究委员会关于制定有害物质社区应急暴露水平指南的出版物中进行了定义,并在NAC/AEGL委员会的标准操作程序中进一步分类。迄今为止,该委员会已审查了近100种化学品。