Owen B A, Jones T D
Health and Safety Research Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Tennessee 37831-6101.
Regul Toxicol Pharmacol. 1990 Apr;11(2):132-48. doi: 10.1016/0273-2300(90)90017-6.
The traditional "absolute decision-making" process used by federal regulatory agencies to derive permissible exposure concentrations for hazardous substances is initiated by an evaluation of the "weight-of-evidence" that a substance is a potential human carcinogen. Subsequent conservative procedures applied variably to noncarcinogens and carcinogens yield exposure limits for individual substances based on "data-sparse, model-intensive" techniques which may lack consistency and have difficulty directly addressing the hazards from complex mixtures. This paper describes how a "relative decision-making" technique applicable to complex mixtures can supplement the "absolute" approach currently used. Estimates obtained through this "data-intensive, model-sparse" technique may be evaluated by comparisons to estimates representing a range of hazards "generally regarded as safe" derived through analyses of chlorinated drinking water, cigarette smoke condensate, and other common human exposures. Comparisons are also used to evaluate the relative degree of consistency in risk estimates between 58 suspect human carcinogens analyzed by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Carcinogen Assessment Group and by the authors.
联邦监管机构用于推导有害物质允许接触浓度的传统“绝对决策”过程,始于对一种物质是否为潜在人类致癌物的“证据权重”评估。随后,针对非致癌物和致癌物采用的保守程序各不相同,基于“数据稀少、模型密集”的技术得出单个物质的接触限值,这些技术可能缺乏一致性,并且难以直接解决复杂混合物带来的危害。本文描述了一种适用于复杂混合物的“相对决策”技术如何能够补充当前使用的“绝对”方法。通过这种“数据密集、模型稀少”技术获得的估计值,可以通过与通过分析氯化饮用水、香烟烟雾冷凝物和其他常见人类接触物得出的一系列“一般认为安全”的危害估计值进行比较来评估。比较还用于评估美国环境保护局致癌物评估组和作者分析的58种可疑人类致癌物之间风险估计的相对一致程度。