Reiter L W, DeRosa C, Kavlock R J, Lucier G, Mac M J, Melillo J, Melnick R L, Sinks T, Walton B T
National Health and Environmental Effects Research Laboratory, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Research Triangle Park, NC 27711, USA.
Environ Health Perspect. 1998 Mar;106(3):105-13. doi: 10.1289/ehp.98106105.
The potential health and ecological effects of endocrine disrupting chemicals has become a high visibility environmental issue. The 1990s have witnessed a growing concern, both on the part of the scientific community and the public, that environmental chemicals may be causing widespread effects in humans and in a variety of fish and wildlife species. This growing concern led the Committee on the Environment and Natural Resources (CENR) of the National Science and Technology Council to identify the endocrine disruptor issue as a major research initiative in early 1995 and subsequently establish an ad hoc Working Group on Endocrine Disruptors. The objectives of the working group are to 1) develop a planning framework for federal research related to human and ecological health effects of endocrine disrupting chemicals; 2) conduct an inventory of ongoing federal research programs; and 3) identify research gaps and develop a coordinated interagency plan to address priority research needs. This communication summarizes the activities of the federal government in defining a common framework for planning an endocrine disruptor research program and in assessing the status of the current effort. After developing the research framework and compiling an inventory of active research projects supported by the federal government in fiscal year 1996, the CENR working group evaluated the current federal effort by comparing the ongoing activities with the research needs identified in the framework. The analysis showed that the federal government supports considerable research on human health effects, ecological effects, and exposure assessment, with a predominance of activity occurring under human health effects. The analysis also indicates that studies on reproductive development and carcinogenesis are more prevalent than studies on neurotoxicity and immunotoxicity, that mammals (mostly laboratory animals) are the main species under study, and that chlorinated dibenzodioxins and polychlorinated biphenyls are the most commonly studied chemical classes. Comparison of the inventory with the research needs should allow identification of underrepresented research areas in need of attention.
内分泌干扰化学物质对健康和生态的潜在影响已成为一个备受瞩目的环境问题。20世纪90年代,科学界和公众越来越担心环境化学物质可能正在对人类以及各种鱼类和野生动物物种产生广泛影响。这种日益增长的担忧促使国家科学技术委员会环境与自然资源委员会(CENR)在1995年初将内分泌干扰物问题确定为一项重大研究计划,并随后成立了一个内分泌干扰物特设工作组。该工作组的目标是:1)制定一个与内分泌干扰化学物质对人类和生态健康影响相关的联邦研究规划框架;2)对正在进行的联邦研究项目进行清查;3)找出研究差距并制定一项跨部门协调计划,以满足优先研究需求。本通讯总结了联邦政府在确定内分泌干扰物研究计划规划通用框架以及评估当前工作进展方面所开展的活动。在制定了研究框架并汇编了1996财年由联邦政府支持的活跃研究项目清单之后,CENR工作组通过将正在进行的活动与框架中确定的研究需求进行比较,对当前联邦工作进行了评估。分析表明,联邦政府在人类健康影响、生态影响和暴露评估方面支持了大量研究,其中以人类健康影响方面的活动为主。分析还表明,关于生殖发育和致癌作用的研究比关于神经毒性和免疫毒性的研究更为普遍,研究的主要物种是哺乳动物(大多为实验动物),最常研究的化学类别是氯化二苯并二恶英和多氯联苯。将清单与研究需求进行比较应有助于找出需要关注的研究领域覆盖不足的情况。