edoc

A tiered approach for assessing individual and combined risk of pyrethroids using human biomonitoring data

Tarazona, J. V. and Cattaneo, I. and Niemann, L. and Pedraza-Diaz, S. and González-Caballero, M. C. and de Alba-Gonzalez, M. and Cañas, A. and Dominguez-Morueco, N. and Esteban-López, M. and Castaño, A. and Borges, T. and Katsonouri, A. and Makris, K. C. and Ottenbros, I. and Mol, H. and De Decker, A. and Morrens, B. and Berman, T. and Barnett-Itzhaki, Z. and Probst-Hensch, N. and Fuhrimann, S. and Tratnik, J. S. and Horvat, M. and Rambaud, L. and Riou, M. and Schoeters, G. and Govarts, E. and Kolossa-Gehring, M. and Weber, T. and Apel, P. and Namorado, S. and Santonen, T.. (2022) A tiered approach for assessing individual and combined risk of pyrethroids using human biomonitoring data. Toxics, 10 (8). p. 451.

[img] PDF - Published Version
Available under License CC BY (Attribution).

1741Kb

Official URL: https://edoc.unibas.ch/90848/

Downloads: Statistics Overview

Abstract

Pyrethroids are a major insecticide class, suitable for biomonitoring in humans. Due to similarities in structure and metabolic pathways, urinary metabolites are common to various active substances. A tiered approach is proposed for risk assessment. Tier I was a conservative screening for overall pyrethroid exposure, based on phenoxybenzoic acid metabolites. Subsequently, probabilistic approaches and more specific metabolites were used for refining the risk estimates. Exposure was based on 95th percentiles from HBM4EU aligned studies (2014-2021) covering children in Belgium, Cyprus, France, Israel, Slovenia, and The Netherlands and adults in France, Germany, Israel, and Switzerland. In all children populations, the 95th percentiles for 3-phenoxybenzoic acid (3-PBA) exceeded the screening value. The probabilistic refinement quantified the risk level of the most exposed population (Belgium) at 2% or between 1-0.1% depending on the assumptions. In the substance specific assessments, the 95th percentiles of urinary concentrations in the aligned studies were well below the respective human biomonitoring guidance values (HBM-GVs). Both information sets were combined for refining the combined risk. Overall, the HBM data suggest a low health concern, at population level, related to pyrethroid exposure for the populations covered by the studies, even though a potential risk for highly exposed children cannot be completely excluded. The proposed tiered approach, including a screening step and several refinement options, seems to be a promising tool of scientific and regulatory value in future.
Faculties and Departments:09 Associated Institutions > Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute (Swiss TPH)
09 Associated Institutions > Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute (Swiss TPH) > Department of Epidemiology and Public Health (EPH) > Chronic Disease Epidemiology > Exposome Science (Probst-Hensch)
03 Faculty of Medicine > Departement Public Health > Sozial- und Präventivmedizin > Exposome Science (Probst-Hensch)
UniBasel Contributors:Probst-Hensch, Nicole and Fuhrimann, Samuel
Item Type:Article, refereed
Article Subtype:Research Article
ISSN:2305-6304 (Electronic)2305-6304 (Linking)
Note:Publication type according to Uni Basel Research Database: Journal article
Language:English
Related URLs:
Identification Number:
edoc DOI:
Last Modified:27 Dec 2022 22:15
Deposited On:27 Dec 2022 22:15

Repository Staff Only: item control page