Exposure and toxicity characterization of chemical emissions and chemicals in products: Global recommendations and implementation in USEtox

Fantke, P; Chiu, WA; Aylward, L; Judson, R; Huang, L; Jang, S; Gouin, T; Rhomberg, L; Aurisano, N; McKone, T; Jolliet, O

HERO ID

12033135

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2021

PMID

34140756

HERO ID 12033135
In Press No
Year 2021
Title Exposure and toxicity characterization of chemical emissions and chemicals in products: Global recommendations and implementation in USEtox
Authors Fantke, P; Chiu, WA; Aylward, L; Judson, R; Huang, L; Jang, S; Gouin, T; Rhomberg, L; Aurisano, N; McKone, T; Jolliet, O
Journal International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment
Volume 26
Issue 5
Page Numbers 899-915
Abstract PURPOSE: Reducing chemical pressure on human and environmental health is an integral part of the global sustainability agenda. Guidelines for deriving globally applicable, life cycle based indicators are required to consistently quantify toxicity impacts from chemical emissions as well as from chemicals in consumer products. In response, we elaborate the methodological framework and present recommendations for advancing near-field/far-field exposure and toxicity characterization, and for implementing these recommendations in the scientific consensus model USEtox. METHODS: An expert taskforce was convened by the Life Cycle Initiative hosted by UN Environment to expand existing guidance for evaluating human toxicity impacts from exposure to chemical substances. This taskforce evaluated advances since the original release of USEtox. Based on these advances, the taskforce identified two major aspects that required refinement, namely integrating near-field and far-field exposure and improving human dose-response modeling. Dedicated efforts have led to a set of recommendations to address these aspects in an update of USEtox, while ensuring consistency with the boundary conditions for characterizing life cycle toxicity impacts and being aligned with recommendations from agencies that regulate chemical exposure. The proposed framework was finally tested in an illustrative rice production and consumption case study. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION: On the exposure side, a matrix system is proposed and recommended to integrate far-field exposure from environmental emissions with near-field exposure from chemicals in various consumer product types. Consumer exposure is addressed via submodels for each product type to account for product characteristics and exposure settings. Case study results illustrate that product-use related exposure dominates overall life cycle exposure. On the effect side, a probabilistic dose-response approach combined with a decision tree for identifying reliable points of departure is proposed for non-cancer effects, following recent guidance from the World Health Organization. This approach allows for explicitly considering both uncertainty and human variability in effect factors. Factors reflecting disease severity are proposed to distinguish cancer from non-cancer effects, and within the latter discriminate reproductive/developmental and other non-cancer effects. All proposed aspects have been consistently implemented into the original USEtox framework. CONCLUSIONS: The recommended methodological advancements address several key limitations in earlier approaches. Next steps are to test the new characterization framework in additional case studies and to close remaining research gaps. Our framework is applicable for evaluating chemical emissions and product-related exposure in life cycle assessment, chemical alternatives assessment and chemical substitution, consumer exposure and risk screening, and high-throughput chemical prioritization.
Doi 10.1007/s11367-021-01889-y
Pmid 34140756
Wosid WOS:000636939100001
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Keyword Life cycle impact assessment; characterization factors; chemical toxicity; dose-response modelling; global guidance; human toxicity impacts; near-field exposure