Integral Consulting Inc., Seattle, Washington, USA.
Integral Consulting Inc., New York, New York, USA.
Integr Environ Assess Manag. 2023 May;19(3):605-612. doi: 10.1002/ieam.4659. Epub 2022 Aug 4.
The relative source contribution (RSC) term has long been used by the US Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) and state regulatory agencies in setting criteria in water. The RSC reflects the proportion of the total daily intake of a chemical that can be derived from water when all other sources of exposure (e.g., food, air) are considered. This term is applied by the USEPA and state regulatory agencies when deriving ambient water quality criteria, maximum contaminant level goals, and drinking water health advisories for noncarcinogenic and threshold carcinogenic compounds. The value assigned to the RSC term affects the calculated criteria directly, with the allowable concentration in water decreasing with a decreasing RSC. A default RSC value of 20%-applied by regulatory entities in the USA for more than 40 years-assumes that 80% of an individual's exposure to a chemical's reference dose is from nonwater sources. Although the RSC is a chemical-specific parameter, there are few instances where a value other than the default of 20% has been approved and used. In 2000, USEPA outlined the process for developing chemical-specific RSC values, yet primary use of the default RSC value has continued since then. This article reviews USEPA's methodology for deriving chemical-specific RSC values and provides a case example using perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) to explore how the USEPA and state regulatory agencies are applying USEPA's guidance. The case study highlights inconsistent derivation of the RSC term, rooted in limitations in the current methodology. We suggest additional clarification of and more thoughtful use of the available data that may not meet USEPA's current adequacy requirements. We also recommend that the USEPA discuss recommendations for using biomonitoring data to set RSCs. Integr Environ Assess Manag 2023;19:605-612. © 2022 SETAC.
相对源贡献(RSC)术语长期以来一直被美国环境保护署(USEPA)和州监管机构用于制定水中标准。RSC 反映了在考虑所有其他暴露源(如食物、空气)时,从水中摄入某种化学物质的总日摄入量的比例。当 USEPA 和州监管机构推导出环境水质标准、最大污染物水平目标和非致癌和阈值致癌化合物的饮用水健康建议时,会使用该术语。分配给 RSC 术语的值会直接影响计算出的标准,随着 RSC 的降低,允许的水中浓度也会降低。监管机构在美国使用了默认的 RSC 值 20%,该值假设个人接触化学物质参考剂量的 80%来自非水来源,这一默认值已被应用了 40 多年。虽然 RSC 是一种化学物质特有的参数,但很少有批准和使用除默认值 20%以外的值的情况。2000 年,USEPA 概述了制定化学物质特定 RSC 值的过程,但自那时以来,一直主要使用默认的 RSC 值。本文回顾了 USEPA 推导化学物质特定 RSC 值的方法,并使用全氟辛酸(PFOA)的案例示例探讨了 USEPA 和州监管机构如何应用 USEPA 的指导。该案例研究突出了 RSC 术语的不一致推导,其根源在于当前方法的局限性。我们建议对可能不符合 USEPA 当前充分性要求的可用数据进行进一步澄清和更深入的使用。我们还建议 USEPA 讨论使用生物监测数据来设定 RSC 的建议。《综合环境评估与管理》2023 年;19:605-612。©2022 SETAC。