Publications by authors named "Rhomberg L"

Article Synopsis
  • The text discusses the need for a thorough evaluation of available evidence to assess potential human health risks from various environmental agents, emphasizing the importance of integrating data from different sources in risk assessments.
  • It summarizes key discussions from an international workshop involving experts from different sectors who aimed to develop an evidence-based risk assessment framework that accurately reflects human health risks and uncertainties.
  • While the workshop did not aim for complete consensus, participants generally agreed on important considerations for incorporating modern scientific approaches into risk assessment, leading to the creation of a prototype framework for further exploration.
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The Steering Committee of the Alliance for Risk Assessment (ARA) opened a call for scientists interested in resolving what appeared to be a conundrum in estimating of the half-life of perfluorooctanoate (PFOA) in humans. An Advisory Committee was formed from nominations received and a subsequent invitation led to the development of three small independent working groups to review appropriate information and attempt a resolution. Initial findings were shared among these groups and a conclusion developed from the ensuing discussions.

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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.

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Our understanding of the etiology of cancer has developed significantly over the past fifty years, beginning with a single-hit linear no-threshold (LNT) conceptual model based on early studies conducted in Drosophila. Over the past several decades, multiple lines of evidence have accumulated to support a contemporary model of chemical carcinogenesis: a multi-hit model involving a prolonged stress environment that over time may drive the mutation of multiple cells into an injured state that ultimately could lead to uncontrolled proliferation via clonal expansion of mutation-carrying daughter cells. Arsenic carcinogenicity offers a useful case study for further exploration of advanced conceptual models for chemical carcinogenesis.

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Background: There are several standards that offer explicit guidance on good practice in systematic reviews (SRs) for the medical sciences; however, no similarly comprehensive set of recommendations has been published for SRs that focus on human health risks posed by exposure to environmental challenges, chemical or otherwise.

Objectives: To develop an expert, cross-sector consensus view on a key set of recommended practices for the planning and conduct of SRs in the environmental health sciences.

Methods: A draft set of recommendations was derived from two existing standards for SRs in biomedicine and developed in a consensus process, which engaged international participation from government, industry, non-government organisations, and academia.

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Chronic inhalation of naphthalene causes nasal olfactory epithelial tumors in rats and benign lung adenomas in mice. The available human data do not establish an association between naphthalene and increased respiratory cancer risk. Therefore, cancer risk assessment of naphthalene in humans depends predominantly on experimental evidence from rodents.

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The carcinogenic potential of a non-genotoxic pyrethroid imiprothrin was examined in rats and mice. There was no carcinogenicity in rats up to a maximum dose of 5000 ppm of the diet. There was a higher (p = 0.

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The International Agency for Research on Cancer recently classified straight-run bitumens and associated emissions during road paving as possibly carcinogenic to humans (Group 2B), owing to potential exposures to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. We examine existing chemistry, exposure, epidemiology, and animal toxicity data to explore quantitative cancer risk implications for paving workers exposed to asphalt emissions from the data used in identifying this qualitative hazard. Epidemiology studies show no consistent cancer risk elevation.

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Background: The Life Cycle Initiative, hosted at the United Nations Environment Programme, selected human toxicity impacts from exposure to chemical substances as an impact category that requires global guidance to overcome current assessment challenges. The initiative leadership established the Human Toxicity Task Force to develop guidance on assessing human exposure and toxicity impacts. Based on input gathered at three workshops addressing the main current scientific challenges and questions, the task force built a roadmap for advancing human toxicity characterization, primarily for use in life cycle impact assessment (LCIA).

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Inorganic arsenic (iAs) in drinking water varies geographically and is prevalent worldwide. While exposures in the US are generally low, there are some areas with higher levels of naturally occurring iAs (potentially >100μg/L) where residents rely on unregulated drinking water wells. Much of the evidence on the association between iAs and cancer comes from epidemiological studies conducted in South American and Asian populations.

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Objective: US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) based its benzene carcinogenicity assessment on the Pliofilm cohort. We evaluated associations between benzene exposure and acute nonlymphocytic leukemia (ANLL) and acute myelocytic leukemia (AML) risks using this cohort's updated exposure estimates and mortality data.

Methods: We calculated standardized mortality ratios (SMRs) for ANLL/AML using lifetable analyses, with various exposure quantile categories and lag times.

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Approaches for the systematic review and evaluation of chemical toxicity are currently being reconsidered, with a specific focus on the evaluation of individual studies and their integration into the overall body of evidence. This renewed interest has arisen, in part, as a result of several prominent reviews of these approaches by special committees of the National Research Council (NRC), among others. We conducted a critical evaluation of several available frameworks for evaluating study quality.

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Article Synopsis
  • Bergman et al. (2015) disagree with our critique (Lamb et al., 2014) of the WHO-UNEP report on endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs) published in 2012.
  • We highlight key differences in our perspectives, particularly around study selection and data presentation related to EDCs.
  • Our response focuses on three main issues: the distinction between hazard and risk, differing methods for identifying hazards, and the absence of justification for treating EDCs differently from other chemical agents.
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The International Agency for Research on Cancer qualitatively characterized occupational exposure to oxidized bitumen emissions during roofing as probably carcinogenic to humans (Group 2A). We examine chemistry, exposure, epidemiology and animal toxicity data to explore quantitative risks for roofing workers applying built-up roofing asphalt (BURA). Epidemiology studies do not consistently report elevated risks, and generally do not have sufficient exposure information or adequately control for confounders, precluding their use for dose-response analysis.

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Inhalation of naphthalene causes olfactory epithelial nasal tumors in rats (but not in mice) and benign lung adenomas in mice (but not in rats). The limited available human data have not identified an association between naphthalene exposure and increased respiratory cancer risk. Assessing naphthalene's carcinogenicity in humans, therefore, depends entirely on experimental evidence from rodents.

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The United States Environmental Protection Agency (US EPA) issues National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS) for six criteria pollutants, including ozone. Each standard has four elements: an indicator, level, averaging time, and form. Ozone levels (i.

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The possibility of an association between inorganic arsenic (iAs) exposure and cardiovascular outcomes has received increasing attention in the literature over the past decade. The United States Environmental Protection Agency (US EPA) is currently revising its Integrated Risk Assessment System (IRIS) review of iAs, and one of the non-cancer endpoints of interest is cardiovascular disease (CVD). Despite the increased interest in this area, substantial gaps remain in the available information, particularly regarding the mechanism of action (MOA) by which iAs could cause or exacerbate CVD.

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Federal and other regulatory agencies often use or claim to use a weight of evidence (WoE) approach in chemical evaluation. Their approaches to the use of WoE, however, differ significantly, rely heavily on subjective professional judgment, and merit improvement. We review uses of WoE approaches in key articles in the peer-reviewed scientific literature, and find significant variations.

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Other papers in this symposium focus on combining direct observations or measurements of a phenomenon of interest. Here, I consider the distinct problem of integrating diverse kinds of data to address the scientific case for toxicological causation in view of information that usually contains gaps and outright contradictions. Existing weight-of-evidence approaches have been criticized as either too formulaic or too vague, simply calling for professional judgment that is hard to trace to its scientific basis.

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Early in 2013, the World Health Organization (WHO) released a 2012 update to the 2002 State of the Science of Endocrine Disrupting Chemicals. Several significant concerns have been identified that raise questions about conclusions reached in this report regarding endocrine disruption. First, the report is not a state-of-the-science review and does not follow the 2002 WHO recommended weight-of-evidence approach.

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In a recent draft report, Next Generation Risk Assessment: Incorporation of Recent Advances in Molecular, Computational, and Systems Biology, the US Environmental Protection Agency presents valuable contributions to understanding the roles that evolving toxicity testing methods and associated interpretative techniques can play in assessing the risks associated with chemical exposures. However, the evaluations presented in the NexGen report would benefit from more thorough consideration of several essential components of a critical review of toxicity data, e.g.

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