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Utilizing literature-based rodent toxicology data to derive potency estimates for quantitative risk assessment

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journal contribution
posted on 2021-06-05, 00:00 authored by Theresa E. Boots, Alyssa M. Kogel, Nathan M. Drew, Eileen D. Kuempel

Evaluating the potential occupational health risk of engineered nanomaterials is an ongoing need. The objective of this meta-analysis, which consisted of 36 studies containing 86 materials, was to assess the availability of published in vivo rodent pulmonary toxicity data for a variety of nanoscale and microscale materials and to derive potency estimates via benchmark dose modeling. Additionally, the potency estimates based on particle mass lung dose associated with acute pulmonary inflammation were used to group materials based on toxicity. The commonalities among the physicochemical properties of the materials in each group were also explored. This exploration found that a material’s potency tended to be associated primarily with the material class based on chemical composition and form (e.g. carbon nanotubes, TiO2, ZnO) rather than with particular physicochemical properties. Limitations in the data available precluded a more extensive analysis of these associations. Issues such as data reporting and appropriate experimental design for use in quantitative risk assessment are the main reasons publications were excluded from these analyses and are discussed.

Funding

Dr. Mahapatra acknowledges funding from the EU H2020 research infrastructure for nanosafety, NanoCommons, [Grant Agreement No. 731032].

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