More Simon J, Bampidis Vasileios, Benford Diane, Bragard Claude, Halldorsson Thorhallur I, Hernández-Jerez Antonio F, Hougaard Bennekou Susanne, Koutsoumanis Kostas P, Machera Kyriaki, Naegeli Hanspeter, Nielsen Søren S, Schlatter Josef R, Schrenk Dieter, Silano Vittorio, Turck Dominique, Younes Maged, Gundert-Remy Ursula, Kass George E N, Kleiner Juliane, Rossi Anna Maria, Serafimova Rositsa, Reilly Linda, Wallace Heather M
EFSA J. 2019 Jun 6;17(6):e05708. doi: 10.2903/j.efsa.2019.5708. eCollection 2019 Jun.
The Scientific Committee confirms that the Threshold of Toxicological Concern (TTC) is a pragmatic screening and prioritisation tool for use in food safety assessment. This Guidance provides clear step-by-step instructions for use of the TTC approach. The inclusion and exclusion criteria are defined and the use of the TTC decision tree is explained. The approach can be used when the chemical structure of the substance is known, there are limited chemical-specific toxicity data and the exposure can be estimated. The TTC approach should not be used for substances for which EU food/feed legislation requires the submission of toxicity data or when sufficient data are available for a risk assessment or if the substance under consideration falls into one of the exclusion categories. For substances that have the potential to be DNA-reactive mutagens and/or carcinogens based on the weight of evidence, the relevant TTC value is 0.0025 μg/kg body weight (bw) per day. For organophosphates or carbamates, the relevant TTC value is 0.3 μg/kg bw per day. All other substances are grouped according to the Cramer classification. The TTC values for Cramer Classes I, II and III are 30 μg/kg bw per day, 9 μg/kg bw per day and 1.5 μg/kg bw per day, respectively. For substances with exposures below the TTC values, the probability that they would cause adverse health effects is low. If the estimated exposure to a substance is higher than the relevant TTC value, a non-TTC approach is required to reach a conclusion on potential adverse health effects.
科学委员会确认,毒理学关注阈值(TTC)是用于食品安全评估的一种实用筛选和优先排序工具。本指南为TTC方法的使用提供了清晰的逐步说明。定义了纳入和排除标准,并解释了TTC决策树的使用。当物质的化学结构已知、特定化学物质的毒性数据有限且暴露量可估算时,可使用该方法。对于欧盟食品/饲料法规要求提交毒性数据的物质,或有足够数据进行风险评估的物质,或所考虑的物质属于排除类别之一时,不应使用TTC方法。对于基于证据权重有可能成为DNA反应性诱变剂和/或致癌物的物质,相关的TTC值为每天0.0025微克/千克体重(bw)。对于有机磷酸酯或氨基甲酸酯,相关的TTC值为每天0.3微克/千克bw。所有其他物质根据克莱默分类法进行分组。克莱默I类、II类和III类的TTC值分别为每天30微克/千克bw、每天9微克/千克bw和每天1.5微克/千克bw。对于暴露量低于TTC值的物质,它们导致不良健康影响的可能性较低。如果估计的物质暴露量高于相关的TTC值,则需要采用非TTC方法来得出关于潜在不良健康影响的结论。