F/EPA
             United States
             Environmental Protection
             Agency-
Office of the Administrator
Science Advisory Board
Washington DC 20460
                          SAS-EC-88-040D
                          September 1DR8
                          Finn.' Report
     REVISED     24, 1988
Appendix D:
Strategies for
Health  Effects Research
             Report of the Subcommittee
             on  Health Effects
             Research Strategies Committee

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                            SOT ICE
        s            town sorrittan as a part of     activities
of tfieScienca Advisory Board, a public advisory       providing
extramural scientific information     advic*  to     Administrator
          officials of                              Agency.
The       is structured to provide a
of scientific matters r«iat«d to           facing  tht*  A<.j<*ney.
This                              for          'by    Agency;
henc«i     contents of this        do      necessarily
                        poiiciaa of     Enviromi«nt«i Prot«ction
       or of                          Any          of
      or                     do                             or
                   use.

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                   U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
                          Science Advisory Board
                      Research Strategies Committee
                           Health Effects Group
Chair
Dr. David Rail
       Director
       National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences
       111 Alexander Drive, Bldg. 101
       Research Triangle Park, NC  27709

Member

Dr. Ejla Bingham
       Department o£ Environmental Health
       University of Cincinnati Medical College
       Kettering Laboratory
       3223 Eden Avenue
       Cincinnati, Ohio  45267

Dr. Bernard Goldstein
       Chairman, Department of Environmental      Community  Medicine
       UMDMJ-Robert Wood Johnson Medical
       675      Lane
       Piscataway,     Jersey  08854-5635

Dr. David Hoel
       Director, Division  of  Biometry  and  Risk.
       National Institute  of  Environmental Health Sciences
       Research Triangle Park, North Carolina   27709

Dr. Jerry Hook
       Vice President, Preclinical
       Smith, Kline and  French  Laboratory
       709 Swedland
       King of Prussia,  PA  19406

Dr. Philip Landrigan
       Director,  Division  of  Environmental     Occupational Medicine
       Mt. Sinai         of Medicine
       1          Levy  Place
       New       New  York   10029

Dr. Donald
       Director,  Division  of Human Risk
       National Center for Toxicological
       Jefferson,            72079

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Dr.- Frederica Perera
       School of Pjblic Health
       Division of Environmental Sciences
       Columbia University
       60 Haven Avenue
       New York, New York  10032

Dr. E.Len Silberqeld
       Chief, Toxics Program
       Environmental Defense Fjnd
       1616 P Street, N. W.
       Room 150
       Washington, D. C.   20036

Dr. Arthur Upton
       Director, Institute o£ Environmental Medicine
       New York University Medical Center
       550 First Avenue
       New York, New York  10016

Science Advisory Board StafC

Dr. C. Richard Cothern
       Executive Secretary
       Environmental Protection Agency
       Science Advisory Board
       401 M Street, S. W.
       Washington,  D. C.    20460   (AlOl)

Ms. Renee1 Butler
       StaCC Secretary
       Environmental Protection Agency
       Science Advisory Board
       401 M Street, S. W.
       Washington,  D.  C..   10460    (AlOl)

Ms. Mary Winston
             Secretary
       Environmental Protection Agency
               Advisory Board
       401 M Street, S. W.
       Washington,  D.  C.   20460   (AlOl)

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                                           OF  THE  AL  AIM
Abstract

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3


Chapter 4
               Title



Environmental  Factors and       Health

Kinds of long-Term Research

Research Advances in the Toxicology of
Lead

      Baslc/long-Tera Research with
Application to Environmental Health
Problems
Chapter 5    Population Rtsk/Risk
   Authgir



Arthyr Upton

James Pouts

Kathryn Mahaffey
Marshall
Frederlca Pereri




     Wtlcox

David
Michael Ho§an
Chapter 6

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                                 ABSTRACT


    This                   to           the
               {both  basic  and  applied)                            of EPA
                   1  pro¥ides a historical             ,           the
       and         of                           of        and disease,
        on the  underlying            of toxldty with Implications for risk
           and          prevention, and indicates      of the
                 Is clearly  Inadequate.

            2       a distinction         the       and applitd long-term
health effects                of EPA          by providing specific
              Illustrate  the     for                     "generic" Issues
as well as various          activities           application to specific
problems and specific sittings  but which      be carried on      a
of         years,   An        has            to explain how EPA
on baste          of  the                by
pirticylarly as it relates  to the regulatory Mission of the

    In         3  the                  1s      as the          to Illustrate
the piice of and  necessity  for  long-sustained, basic          activity 1n
the            of a  foundation for  constructive action 1n
         in               health.   Contlnyed
Investigations  on      toxldty are  at one  and the
the      justifiable  and  yet                 of                  in  the
       field of

    A        of leadl                                 activities with
potential application to  environmental                  are            1n
        4,  It          to highlight       activities
     the                  in this             of
        of the "new           biology*           field,       as  the       of
          and                  the             and  yse  of             to
                        and          and  for relating           to
Other                    In      toxicology,                  and
                        are             An                of
                             and validation.                             is
          as a                new                       find      yseful
applications in         of the  Internal  stryctures, states,  and
             of         biological

    Finally, In         5 the         of            of            risks 1s
           pirtlcylarly as if relates to the role of             1n the
quantification of possible              risks.
inclyde        of                    or extrapolation             prlmiry
                 or Indirect       of        ind
         1n                       and               of biologically
effectlte                               1n                             and
                 analysis are also                                the

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                                   -2-

        of                on        and                      within any
                     ire
            tnd                     1s            as                 If
the EPA 1s to           *                  policy  in the
       possible.

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                                   -3-

        1


                                        AND

                               Arthur




    The      cerstyfy  has       the          of                which
caused the          morbidity  and mortality in previous generitlons.   In
the                    of  the world, the         life            hts
doubled, now           the biblical       of              and
(Figures 1  and 2).   This                                         mlriculoys
to our great grandfathers,  has rtsylted               1n our
of the relationship                and the              broadly
These advances,     the resulting              1n igricylture, nutrition,
sanitation, public  health,  and               all but            1nfectioy$
and parasitic          as             of        in the Industrialized
world,                 afflictions  as              of       1n the
industrialized world tre               1n              and
chronic                       and        (Figure 3).
       until          largely  as            or                           of
aging, ire now            Increasingly to                        Qyr
          1s to          the        and  to              14).
       AMD         OF
OF        AN

    The "environment",         broa-iy,              all
that     act on the            ind ,-Jdy.        of  the         ire
or         by     himself.   They                  and  physical         in
tir, food,                                             the      and  the
workplace.  The "eiwlfoment"  1s              and             changing.
Inevitably,           ft          a        of        1n
             wd      mitt pie                               the
of                           1n               the                   of any
given                     may            the effect of               and the
conditions of
    Air

                   of             pollytion, such'as       listed in
Table 1,                    to                            in           and
mortality.  The         of                            ire
           and may vary,           on the            in          and
               in the            (4),

    On                  at relatively                     in the
a variety of            ire       to                                Include
              (e.g.,                  ¥loyl chloride.

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                                    ,4-

radon), metals (e.g., lead,  nttrcury,  arsenic, nickel) and dusts (e.g.,
          silica,        fibers,  coal)  (5).

    Also well            are the  effects  of chronic          to cigarette
        The Incidence of lung canctr has  risen  precipitously, In pinllel
with the            Increase in cigarette consumption (Figure 4).  In
smokers, furthermore, there  1s a  systematic relationship          the
       of       inhaled and  mortality     lyng cancer {Ftgyrt 5), other
cancers, heurt disease, and  respiratory dlseasts. •  Lesser effects
tentatively attributed to passive Inhalation of cigarette       in
chronically         nonsnokers,

    The ultimate effects of  chronic  low-level exposyre to otttr widely
prevalent                     and their derlfitlwes (such as sulfur
dioxide,        nitrogen dioxide,      tlpyrene, and various
participates) are less well

    Although the air pollution produced as a result of      conbustlon 1s a
direct cause of respiratory  fatalities,        1s  no              of  their
number; however, seven!                         of the        of
fatalities ittrlbutable to the combustion of      in           electricity
(where       701 of coil            occurs),          (81,  for
                       S and §00  fatalities result  per  1000 Mwe of electric
                    yeir      pollut1 on           by     fired plants,  A
                   by         1n  this           the
and      fatal 1t1«s per year per       Mm of
(9,10.1,  On the       of a value  of 7 x 10 Mm of  electric
1n the U.  S,  by the             of coal,  the            Imply that yp  to
700,000 fatalities per year  nay resylt                 of      in the U. S,
Within the uncertainties of  this            1t         wtll with  a
Inference by Wilson      "50,000        the 2 million        who die
     in the               may      their  lives            by »1r pollution"
(11).   One may question, therefore,  the        to       current         i1r
standards provide          protection against  the potential long-term
health effects of coal            prodycts, which cannot be specified with
certainty on the       of existing           (12),

    It 1s            1n the                           pollution
                    nay      to health         1n the chronically
espectally children.  Of Increasing concern Is the        to  which
elevation of the       concentrations within         and buildings, by
weithtr~stripping and other heat-savlnf neasyrcs,             the risk of
lung        1n                 (13-15).

          air-borne pollytints with  potential  health         Includt
allergens of varfoys kinds.   Although susceptibility to             differs
widely       1nd1f1dui1s» sliable populations ire it risk  (4).  The full
significance of air-borne        as        of         1s far
established and strongly merits                 (4).
    In the third world »1crob1il        nation of drinking       still

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                                    -5-

            s             of                            of pollution no
              on i                   in                      tht
            of                his                             in the two
               of       1n the U.  S.:         and
(4,11).  It 1s                                                    to be
polluted in i                of       {Figure 6),       to               by
metals, toxic                     agricultural            and          of
chlori'natlon or ozonization.

    The                of                  of           1n
       be          precisely  on the        of existing
is        to           the                relationships and to clarify the
                                                       may       the
       (17).
          is            to  the         "you  are      you eat".  Overall
       1s             Influenced by the              of          1n the
diet, the                  of                of       (protein, fit,
                the                   of the                   are
          tht          1n      of        naturally
OP               and the          of                   or             (18).
IB               1s             the                          for
                    and                         tht              for
life and

    In tht      of         for                       to
              the      may         tht             of  the                21;
         tht relative               of any  of
to the              of t                 of                     to toe
            (18).  In                 It 1s
        nay                                art  of      or
                the                      of                 tht  net
of the      may         the                 the two      of

            of the                       to the      in  the              of
cincer,                and                      of       In tht
world, the      of                 strongly




    As                                    to                  and
       at                      levels his               to
           Collectively, the                of              and  of
                      my                       by
          (5).

                          art      significant 1n          to
     mty                           it              of            In
                                          a          of
is                     to                        To         the

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                                    -6-

        of              risk  factors,          of
                   1)                 and quantitative            of
         and                 In  the            2)
surveillance and           of wort-related                 and 3)
            of clinical  and laboratory       for              prior
         to         causing         for  Identifying high-risk         and
for                                 at                         ire
readily arrested, or          (4).
    Love Canal  and Times        to              two of
(Tables 3 and 4),         to the      for                        of toxic
                  it 1s clear                                  deficient
in many instances* the             of- optimally      and cost-effective
           will                 research,  as will                    of the
magnitude of the risks       by prevailing levels of contailnjtlon around
existing      sites (21-23),

    The            of                     on
alone.  This       be            to                    of
                                                        Involving
liboratory        and                   be                  as
1n      of the         of toxfcoloflcal       for                1n the
                          7).  TH1$ will                      to
the                   In      of
differences and the Interactive effects  of the                    art
characteristically         it


           Of                         FOR  RISK
AW
    As                   of the         of
the                  of                        of       way
differently to the total.               the         of a              or
            of             vary,           on the            of          as
well as the        In
directly,      act indirectly.         the           of
            or                 on the            of                  {*},
        of ttt«            of                  it is difficult or
to        tht         of i                                        of Its
                    of                    of the                        and
           of        of i           Is also essential in           its
                for        on the       of                    Its
        In                                  of the
extrapolation              bt                                tht
                                         of        (25-26).

                 to tht                           It      not bt
     for            of                       no            art       or

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         to exist.         Include the «ytag«nic, carcinogenic, ind      of
the                     of Ionizing            (14) and
{4).              1n  this  connection 1s the         evidence
to                      life  and eirly Infancy nay
impairment In the             of the brain, the             relationship
for which             to       hitherto  considered nontoxlc
conceivably      no            £2? I.

    In addition.        It is  not always  feasible to el initiate a toxic
from the environment,  the      practical           for mitigating Its
noxioys effects nay  be to       or              In         individuals.
For this                   of the             of      effects may be
crucial, as well  as  the ability to Identify          Indlvldyals it early
              for effective protective Intervention.          for
monitoring         populations, as well  as  for            the environment,
are
    Any               of the      of                       in
not         the influence of        and
Influtnces (28},                                     ts one of  the
                It may affect       1f not all,
inflyences, directly or Indirectly,   Mortality           of the
       of             to      inversely with                ind
       (29).  The      who live In                         the          In
                     of nil nutrition,           ind           living
conditions,                                      to       and       air
pollutants, and            to                   conditions,.
                                                               ind
which                       on

    The            of           dally living        in       who are not
economically               al so
exercise,                of sleep»         of
smoking, and           of                  of         ire
                  In                   {30),   IE         (31) and
Day             {32), who
       and                     Is                        in the
at large.

    Also             Is the                                   of
            and                        (331,               to the
of            in                  not to        or  to                 The
              of         at ill              levels               to
                to  the       for                  to       the
              The                    --                for           300,000
       per      in  the U.  S.                                     ind
                        {33)  --              the            of
 factors,                            f ind                   In         the
             for        or for

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                                   -a-

                  AND                 OF

    As              environmental                    an
range of       illnesses.  They Include, for                    In
chronically         to acid  air pollution, leukemia In                 to
benzene, lung cancer and              in Individuals         to
chronic kidney diseise    neurologic impairment In persons         to
solvents,  impairment of brain             in children         early 1n life
to lead,       disease in  indl¥iduals         to                  and
impairment of reproductive function in men and               to      and
certain pesticides.   Such  Illnesses afflict millions of         in the
United States.

                 environmental          arise from          conditions,
     can be                   the  elimination or           of
exposures  at the source; i.e.,                 prevention.  They are also
         to           prevention -- i.e., early detection  in
                 can still be  controlled or cyred; this          however,
on efficiently and effectively Identifying populations at  high risk.
Finally, their         nay be          by tertiary prevention; i.e.,
prewention of complications  or disability by application of
diagnostic and                                  at all
requires                           the         of  specific
          and               on the       and

                 1n the      two          are           to
environmentally-Induced                 Include,  for           the      Mr
Act, the Safe- Drinking       Act,  the                      and
Act, and the           legislation.   In       of       legislation,
environmentally-Induced                            1n          society.
Given           Illnesses  art            and highly              why  do
still persist!  A        of                   to                situation.

1.  Despite it       two          of  regyl'atory  and  scientific           ind
    effort, relatively little 1s             the
    of      syr^hetlc chemicals.                  tnd
            on a              of relatively                          as
             and lead, and their                       Virtually  no
    information 1s available on tht toxldty  of               80          of
    the 48S000                     In                (Figure  ?!,        for
           of            which are      closely           and       which
    most 1s       ~                 -- reasonably          Information on
                              1s available for only a          of
    (Flgyrt 7),            twaluatiort of new                   1s
    inadequate,

Z.  Physicians art not         to         tht             as i       of
                              do  not                             of
                           for                                         to
    identify in               origin of
                                  are                         10         of
                     (34K   In                             of
    origin are            assigned to                     is      age or
                       and               for                   or

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    are lost.   This         of  Inaccyracy in  diagnosis is            by
    the                   of               origin are typically not
    clinically or  pathologically different                   by lifestyle
    and       factors.

3.   Physiciins do  not                  training 1n               medicine.
    Very little      is          In                          to
    physicians in  training to           the          of       toxins,  or  to
               the       associations                                 and
    disease           The                 medical         receives only
    foyr hoyrs of  training in environmental and              health dyring
    the four years of         school {341.

4.   Persons are typically         to           one                 In the
    environment and       do not realize                             at
    all.  Further, the          of      environmental conditions
    only      years after onset of          during this long latency
    (Incubation),           may                   may be         to i
    variety of environmental exposures, nay syffer various
    exposures, and finally my                             hid
          All of                       the difficulty                 and
                  scientists       In             to        the          of
                            Illness.

5.   The U. S,                                         and
                           art            to                        and
                  conditions;                           Unltatlons
            the          of                to
    Inspection and             ictlons.

6,               unreliable and                                for
    environmentally                         significant               of
    the               of       of  environmentilly         Illntss In  our
    society.  As a result, the picture                   not        an
                      of                        the        of
    disease.

    In          a          lack of             on the toxlclty of the
majority  of            chefflfcals,  Insufficient and
of physiciam, and             surveillance        ill efforts to        the
        of                                 1rt the                 A
plan to         the       1 lance,                         and           of
                      1s
           fir the detection,           and            of
         1n            is Mew  York, Mew Jerstj, and California
as                for                  an        {3SJ.


            OF

     the            It Is                   of the        of  Illness  1n  the
y, S.        1s              wholly or in      to
           Thus, if  the                 billion                             In
the U.  S., a            1s        on                 ire                  or

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                                    -10-

           to                      (36) and       are
preventable.           the                of                       be
                                                     It is
enormous.

           1n the light of the                of  illness to tht U. S.
popylition, the            on          to              Illness are
relatively snail.  In       for          only            of the 15,121,55?
RIO                 by HIH      specifically  to                 on
           (37).  This sum          to           0.251  of the            of
            In the U. S,      year {371.   The  sun       for the
        by ill                                 was  fir         (37},
       in      of EPA's         to         the U.  S.
                          It 1s clear      the                    and
       for the              to be




    The                In        life resylt  1n                   the
Influence of                        Defined broadly,,
§11                              act on the             and
            Inflyences, are          and                 in
«1r, the       and the                 of       are         by man
        to his
             at           levels,        nay               it
levels,                     t             In                        tht
                 §n                                     tht
        of              of         In                or
                                 ifi
                                           as             of           the
             of any one               In tht            of a
                      be             By the             1t  1s  difficult  to
        tht                 to             may            a              at
any pirticulir      level.  In                   of
of            is                                                 1s
and                be       on                                 in
                   or

    To         our               of tht      of                       in
                    priority      be       to          on the  following:
1)                            and                  of the
             21                         of                 and
rates,                             to        the           of specific
        to be         to                                3)
            of         for                   of          to           and
for identifying                      4}            of                  for
               tht            activity of          and
           it low       and In               5)             1n
for                            particular           to
                      and                                 and 6)
              of the            of
is        for              1n                  and  In the         and
                     of                                   In

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                                    -11-

»1goroys         should be                  the  application  of  existing
                    1)  public and professional  education, 2)
standards-setting, 3)                 of new and existing  legislation, 4!
law              and 5) research to evaluate the efficacy of       measures.
In pursuit of Its Mission EPA in coordination with other  agencies  and
institutions           a long-range          strategy addressing     of
the

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                                    -12-

REFERENCES

1.  Jones, H.B.  A         Consideration of  the  Aging                   and
    Life              Unfvi"rsT%  of (TTTf^nTa~,"TTad1at1orr[.aboratory,~~~
             ~» 1955.
    Fries, J.F.   Aging, Mitural  Death,  and  the              of Mortality.
    He* Engl and_J .Jted . 303 : 1 30- 1 35 ,

    Oonabedian,  A. »  Axelrod,  S.J. ,  Swearlngen,  C. ,  and          J. Mt£i_£aT_
    Care _ Chart     . 5th Edition.          of Public        Economics,
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    Second Task  Force for          PI inning in
    Science.  Huma n__ Heaj_t h a n d _th e_ _En_v i roniB_en t  -            re h
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    Levy, B.S. and         O.H.  {Editors! _Qcc u pa 1 1 o n a 1  He a 1 1 h :
    andPrev en t in g^ wo rtt - Re Ute d  D 1 je a s e .  I
    1983.               ~~~     ~"
6.  Cairns, J-  The        Problen.  ScU^Amer.  ^33:64-78, 1975,

?,  Doll, R.  An Ep1de«lQlG§1ca!             of the         of
8.           H.       of EnyP^gctlon,                .
                  ~~~'
9.  Morgan, M.6. , Norrls, S.C. , Htnrlon, M. ,       , D.A.L. » tnd Rlsh, W.R.
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10. Morgan, M.G. , Henri on, H. , Morris, S.C. , and        , D.A.L. uncertainty
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11.        to the Editor.            Public
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12. Ttsk       on                      and       and
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13.           on        Pollutants.   Indoor .PoVlutants^.
    of                       o. c. ,  iwn

14.                    on the Blologlctl         of

-------
                                    -13-

15.          Council on                      and                Evaluation
    of Occupational and Environmental           to       and Rtdort"™^

    on~Ra^TIfTonnjro^eTtfoirTf»3~Heasupements ,
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18, Dlckson, 0,  Toxic                                   on
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17.           on      Drinking         Drinking        and         Vol. 4.
    National         of Sciences,              ~~~~~^
18,           on Diet, Nutrition,  and Cancer,   Dl^et,- Nutrition,  and Cancer.
    National         of                       OTTT
19, Doll, R,  The Epidemiology of Cancer,   In:                  1n  Cancer
           jyT^^
    Philadelphia, 1979, pp. 103-121.

20. Wiiss, 8. and Clarkson, T,   Toxic                    and the
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21. Office of Tectin§1ogy
                              U,  S.  CoigressTwil^
22.          Materials
                              of
    TJasRTrTgton, 0. C. , Ii83.

23.           §n                     to
               of Mul           Contaml                          of


24. Nation*!         of          -                   Council, Tox1c1ty
                                                             NaWoniT"
25,            on

                                         ~™^^
26.         i.S.                                        to
    Teratogentsfs,                  Effects.  j._^er.CoTJj_Tox1_coV._
    ^;113-123S

27.  Bellinger, 0. , Levlton, A.,            C. »            H. , and
                H.                        of          and
             and Early                        N, Engl . J.
    316:1037-1043,

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                                    -14-

28.            H.   §fw™!!t^^
29.               Mortality:          and Wales,  1970-1972.
                                                          1978.
30.  Belloc, N.B.  Relationship of        Practices and  Mortality, Prev.
    Med.  2_:67-81( 1973.                                           ~^

31.  Lyon, J.L.           J.W.,  and West,  D.U,                    in
    and non-Momons In      During 1967-1975.   J-Nat-Caricer
    Inist. 6:10SS-]Qi2,                         — __    _
32,  Phillips, R.L. ,  Garfinkel, L, »         J.M. ,          M.L.,
    Lotz, T, , and Brin, B,   Mortality       California
               for                 Sites.   J.  Mat1.Cjncerlnst.
    65_:1097-1108,

33,          General,  ^okjjiqajidjjealth.              of Health,  Education,
    ind                     ............ IT. ........ T. ....... , ........... TfTf .

34.  Levy, 8.S.  The          of              Health 1n United
                     fl¥e-Year Follow-Up of An Initial Survey.
                       :79-80'                                  ~™~
35.            S.B. and            P.J.                       1n Mw
                               of          °~~~~~~~~    "

36.           of
                                 ___                                     .


37. national Institutes of Health.              U, S. Printing Office,
    Washington, 0. C. ,

-------
                                    -15-
                  1.                       Atr Pollution

                                                     of
       P1ace
      Valley,                                              63
Oonora, Pennsylvania                                       20
London,
Mew York,  Mew                                             200
London, England                                           700

-------
                                   -IS-
              2.        In            May                  of
1,   By providing        of             §r
    --                     of
    --           of                    or
                   or
    --  Products of
    --                        of
        residues)

2.   By affecting           of
    —  Pro¥lsf§n of            for           of
        (secondary amines,  nitrates, nitrites)
        Inhibition of           of              as tn
        (Vitamin C)
    --  Alteration of           of bile       and
                    (
    —  Alteration of           of
        by       fat,         In
    --             of
    --  Affect on           of          (fits,

3.   By                   of
    —                    (alcohol,
    --                 on               In        (fiber)
        Inhibition of                    A,
                191

-------
                                    -17-



              3.                            Pollution
P8B«                    St.  Louis,                             1973
Lead                                                          1976
                                Italy                         1976
                                 California                   1977

                        Love Cinal, Mew York                  1978
Oioxin
Oioxin                          New
aPC8         as                            P88 a$

bfphenyls,        as                                      and      it

1

-------
                                    •18-
    Table 4.  Examples of Outbreaks of Mass Human Poisoning From
              Toxic Chemicals
Date
Location
1930
1934
1952
1952
1952
!955
1956
1958
1959
1960
1964
1967
1§68
1971
1976
1981
1984
U.S.A.
Detroit
London
Japan
Morloga (Japan)
(Japan)
Turkey
Kerala ( India)
Morocco
Iraq
(Japan)
Qatar
Japan
Iraq
Pakistan
Spain
BNopal
                             TrJorthocresyl
                             Lead
                             A1r pollutants
                             Parathlon
                             Arsenic
                             Methylmercury
                             Hexachl
                             Parathlon
                             Tr1 orthocresyl
                             Ethyl mercury
                             Methyl mercury
                             Endffn
                             Polychlorlnated bfpttinyls

                             Malathlon
                             Toxic oil
                             01
Mo_._A£fecte_d

  18,000
   4,000
   4,000
   1 ,800
  12,159°
   1,000
   4,000
     828
  10,000
   1,022
     646
     691
    1.665
  50,000
                                                12.SM
                                                 2»000C
      of

 Thest      tht                   of                   It was
that                                 and 131  died.

C0eaths«  Ttte full       of  lingering  and
unknown.
(Froii            20)

-------
                                    -19-
                                         m   40    so
                                                 OF
                        ao
figyre 1
1n                    and
       1).

-------
                            -20-
     100

2
The                         Survival       In the
U.S.         80                         of the
                   the  1900       and the
                                       hid
           by               1$ n§w the
      of       in        11ft.                  2).

-------
                              -21-
                                            fff all
1
flf fttHJ

221



AN

Of P"^™^^
* Mrty C
of


c







— MIIUU>
^^


3
a
a -
3
a
3
                of       1rt the                 !S67»
as                                       3).

-------
                 -22-

            in                       ind
            1n         ind
61.

-------
                                   -23-
        for «§•
       mm
                   2M
                   tm
                    t
                                           t
                                  t
                           I
                                »         at
                             ^^^^^^^^S iBUPii • Sit  1
                                            4t
Figyre 5
         of             In
        In          to        of
Per Day.                  71.

-------
                                    ,24-
             =          pollution
             -            may  not  be               but the         1s
      not

0
         metals,      is          zinc,                 and
                                                    i
development
*           tnd

                     and indystrlal
Figure 6
                             (As            by

U,  S.                                           161

-------
                             -25-


                :=>V


                t»f
            «MI

                 M




                A


                                       II   I*  1   M     tl
                                      I U 4  J*
                                      14 U
                                                  II
                                      u
                                                            1
   *
    =
line      »          toxlclty
              »
                                  )
        - No

                     of                on            of    Different
                       for
                      241.

-------
                                   -26-

Chipter 2

                             Of LONG-TERM

                                     Foots

LONG-TERM HEALTH EFFECTS          SUPPORTIVE OF EPA

    I.     Basic Research

          Bask research        in EPA programs nay or nay not be  directed
spedficalif at support of  certain applied research programs.   Such  basic
research miy seek, only  to understand detptr levels of the general  universe
of problems attacked in the specific, discrete long-tern, applied
researches {such as described just below).  The general basic  research
philosophy 1s that undtrstandlng            the      chtuticali
disease can lead to earlier detection or better       for         health
effects (and better designs of  epidemiology studies),        analytical
       » etc.  All  of this  can  and often      lead to              for
regulation and, thus,        regulation.      Section  111 below)

               of this  basic research cm be          it using      of  the
"new biology" to         our ability  to                 or to
identify and quantify specific     effects of tor had actors In)
nlxturts of chenricals occurring "naturally".  Ov«n11         the  "
distinguishing         of       b«s1c          1s       1t
"generic" Issues, ind      1t not  necessarily be           any on« specific
        nor      "qylcfc*           A$       1t      be           for
seven! years to be effective and  to  glvt tht kinds of  findings      will
be      uscfyl to      "applied"                      It 1s,          true
that often the      useful  ftcts  and  new                  in resolving tny
environmental                          turning  to  laboratories
basic research.

          There art                    of the kind of
       (and 1$      risky)       any  of the                         of
night be;

              A. New         to        ind quantify dioxlns

                 lisle          his  Identified     characterized  in
intracellular "receptor"  for 41oxin$ tn^ related
curled out                 rtsylted 1n tht partial  purification  of this
receptor, ami                      of the             ind specificity  of
severil of ttw b1§1o§1ci1          of d1on1ns.   Recently,       the "ntw
biolofy* ttchn1fu«»s this  "dloxin* rectptor his      clontd and     now be
     available to           (and                                  In
           his         to  one  posslblt application of
use of this                        to                  tnd
        of              it lt«tt      d1ox1n»Uke           1n
wlxtures—ptrtlcularly of  the  dloxlns 1n soils,

                 Ttii           on tht *i1ox1n*          1s tut  kind of
         effort       «iy  now      to "fruition"  (e.g..  1n tt« nw

-------
                                    -27-

 for          dloEfns In mixtures).   3ut it his           over      years,
 and                                   to  the      practical/applied of
 Gbjectlrts, hts not      of                 to      of the EPA

              B, New         for detecting         to      toxic
                 chenical s

                 The                   are a          of steroid. 11p1d,
 and xtnobiotic mftabolizing                      1n a wiriety of living
        (from yeast to        .                      over at least 35
 his led to                    of the diversity  and               of
        in                The "new  biology"        his given y$      new
 tools  for qyantlfylng and Identifying      of                  It is now
 possible to "fingerprint"  the       an^         of
 of P-4SO in         of              (Including         and plants,
 research his described 1n       detail                    of       P-450s to
 various                        '(including                            all
                    long-continuing, bislc                         be
 giving us       for looking it the            of plants,  animals,  and
 to                    chemicals--e.g.,  the        and       of P-450s
 to reflect           to things like
 Fyrthtr, basic               !         ly  1n                  nay      give
 ys a      for                      and
 (of                           to
 for      flc P-45Qs.

    II.

                irt               of          activity
            to                   and                    but             be
        on      a        of                       can  be              3
                   U                                 ind
 pirts/step$--whert one           usually be                         be
 initiated/planned, 2J                                   a            but
pirts of       can be         on                   3)
and validation.

          A.                                        1n

              This 1s         a        of
of                                    in               projects--either In
their        §r                   ire                     but the key
        1n      Is           1s i
and                            up the

              1,  The       layer and

                       Is i               his           for
Tht       ind                                        of      ire
                     of tht
          1n U¥                       in^
                   on                   nay be

-------
                                   -28-

1 1fe- threaten! ng,             direct.                              in this
overall

                  i.   The  first                at the Issue— Is       any
evidence      we ire  actually losing                       The        to
this {data supporting this)  1s still                and         (at
in      quarters), but the first  indications      that                  to
        a loss;  therefore.,     2

                  b.   The                    to be:             be
this loss of         Is      any       contribution (e.g., chetical)
can destroy       and       is likely  to get to the       layer!
about the chemistry md Interactions of light,        *nd              had
to be                first.                   arc still               out
at this

                  c.   The           was to gather            the
of                  materials/chemical s (e.g.,                           1n
the       liyers of the             New         for
collection of         etc.     to be developed, validated and

                  d.        real-life         of                    had to
be            and           for  their          contributions to the
problem.

                  i,                 as to                   bt
          in          the         of             it  the              had  to
be
                  Thus,            of
here-— chemistry,
sociological/psychological ,  §nd political.            the       to be
     In the overall          of dealing                           on  the
        of                    just        and on      of       preceding,

              2,  He          and                of      rain

                  A        of                               but      ill
                          or                of pollutlon  has        the
effects, and                    really            r§1n 1s         to  be
       primarily      Industrial                        art
ind                           of                   One        In
             Is         the        to                  flora,     and 1n
        1s due to                          and                          or
1s        by                 cars/traffic,       A        of         has
          and        art continuing.  It fs                            of
the              the        Is "yes" to
effects/hunm                                      rain and car
This                   i        of            and
        out                           One of the                     on all
     f Including                         of                      of
          1s           the
               In                                       if
                          at an                                    it

-------
                                   -29-

1n         1987.   The        of this will be           in  |nv1rogient_i1_
HtiUh Perspectives  1n        This          effort In bo theology""and '
TuMarTheTrtrriFfeTts of      rain his      on for years/decades,  and
        ire only now          barely visible.

          B.   Long-term  studies with concyrrent

                    arc              Just      a      time—the
are           the study  just can't be      in short
"pyrely" epidemiology         fall hire—where the
effects of low level, chronic           or      to
resolting only years after  exposure or In populations that      "age" to
                effects.  Most studies on possible        of  cancer or on
carcinogenic        of  chemicals art        So are i¥a1uit1ons of the
       of      other slowly developing effects/diseases (e.g.,
kidney failures, liver         and CVS or CMS effects).        evaluations.
involve multiple             at the           but continuing for a long
     on the      populations.   Chronic  toxldty         In animals Are a
       of this kind  of             There are

              i.  The  "Six  dttes          of                of air
pollution—comparing various indices of        1n         H¥in§ in 6
cities of widely ¥iry1ng        of pollution.  This       has
on for       now,       part of the Increasing clarity In this
resylts from                       now                10 years, but
     1s the        of  new      and             analysis to the         for
       effects.  The point  1s      this
        of the      populations/regions              years to
        and to clearly                                     the         In
air pollution fwhlch                the       of the        in       6
"regions".  The principal effects now            are       on the
(lyng fynctlon             but               ft.g. „ kidney, C¥S) my be
      to be          as       studies continue.

              2.  The  effects of          polychlorinated biphenyl (PC8)
          on childhood              This       with
in the U.S. and           (e.g.,         oil                1n        and
Japan ind           Hke the         of       oil              with PCBs
along highways, and the          of         living near, or walking along
      highways).  From      short-  and                           1t was
                                of PCBs      not       acytely but
                 in       and sybtle.   Therefore,
                   to follow  {for                       1n             of
                    and especially  in  any  children                   The
        of         levels of                    to       on childhood
            ire  now                 In                  only
    dentally-exposed populations  and  a  large        of "Itss-txposed* and
"nomaF/unexposed       and children                for

              3. The         of
Again,                 an  accident—the        of                       and
the        of  this                                   and                  of
the             1n                                    are  still

-------
          for effects,       again,
are         and subtle.

          C.               and  validation of

              In            the          for  detecting and quantifying new
environmental toxins/problem           do not       it the
"problem" ire first discovered.   This  set of  "long-tern"
activities Is vital  in any                to            and affect
environmental        hazards,         are                    but only a few
    be given;

              1.  Dioxins fPCODs)  and              (PCDFs)

                                   for                        ind
quantifying       "families" of                  did not            the
first "poisoning"          in                   The         of
materials         1n                             Is      small, and yet» in
animals,       chemicals      toxic effects  at          low
concentrations.  We are only now         the               to
quantify  and selectively identify and          the             of
chemicals found 1n      real life                 of the        In
analytical                           to      this               of
           The      of            and analytical                      to
Identify  the dlbenzofyrans is              of the      and dloxln
and also  as contributors to      of the toxfcologlcal
                                 This                    his
it                    and 1s not       yet.   Validation of all
                        1s still occurring.

              Z.  Lead

                  W1th/1n                                we
         of the  toxic          1n "deep"      tlssyes.           at
without  painful                or the yse of                  1$ a       If
the          of  1nfomat1on *e      are to be generated—particularly for
long-term stydies,  or for            chronic         {although this
infomitlon  miy       be vital for
      metals,       to      only briefly in                         tissues
and  flyids.         of      and                               In relatively
                      like              (or       fat, etc,),          to
                            of                 are
Non>1rwas1ve         §re  especially  useful/attractive for
                                                 for      In the      of
 lead     be           now      X-ray  flioroscopy.  Validation of this
 1s now  taking  place—total                    to use will be

-------
                                    -31-

ten years 1 f all       well — a  long-tem effort  typical      of  several
others.

    III.   How EPA              on                          by
          Federal Agencies

          Health          within the EPA  Is  ultimately  directed        the
regulatory mission of the Agency,   While                1s  often of  an
"applied" and/or "immediate"         which         specific
the                  with in an             manner,              or
fundamental  research is the only       of Improving  the scientific
rationale underlying regulatory decisions.   It  is vital       the EPA
scientific staff maintain current           of  re1e¥tnt                by
performing      research within the Health Effects         Laboratory  and
by closely following the latest              1n toxicologies!
The               effectively             Its         mission without
scientists                     1n               of     tools  of basic
research.  Without this            and           health scientists  within
the Agency would be unablt to  effectiwely translate  the findings of
fundamental           into the                              sypportive  of the
Agency's regulatory mission.                                           by
EPA represents only a       fraction of      which 1s           to
its regulatory mission, the             rely heavily on
information           by       Federal          particularly  by the various
Institutes of the            of Health and       Services,   These
organizations                      for      of the scientific
In           biology,                                     and
research that have                     of                 for
monitoring,  dosimetry, to*1colog1cal testing, and

          Basic                                               at the
national  Institutes of Health  has substantially          the  Agency's
regulatory            and policies.           on  the                 of
mutation, xenobiotlc metabolism, pnarmacoklnetlcs, and moltcular
performed at the          Institute of Environmental                 has
      applications it EPA In                              and
metabolic activation         for Iji vitro
           for                  ng,                      for
biochemical  epidemlilogj.                       by the
Institute on            of cardnogenesls and        survelllanct has
contributed directly to  the              of  toxtcologlcal               and
gyidelints for                                    by the EPA Office of
Health and                            EPA 1s            directly
widtly and                                  in  the      of neurotoxlcology.
The discovery of                                       cell       within
the                             their             differential
vulnerability!  is  Itadlng to in                        of            of
neyrotoxiclty and                   for the             of
neyrotoxicologic                            will                         to
future        guldtllnes  for neurotoxiclty  testing.

          In addition  to the yse which the              of basic
information            by                               indirect

-------
                                    -32-

(infomation            1n  the  literature  and  discussed at  scientific
forums),  the         also              active          collaborations which
               of       findings  and/or expertise.

          EPft scientists frequently        in collaborative  studies with
scientists in                             as  well  as  their colleagyes in
         who  nay be        by        agencies.   These  research  efforts often
               of expertise in new technologies and new  findings  that may
     applications to the regulatory mission of the Agency.   As an example,
research  on mechanisms involved in the successful  fertilization of the
oocyte has led to int.^ragency  collaborative          to  improve          for
the evaluation of maie fertility.   Other           efforts  delineating the
fyndamental factors involved in        absorption       led to  joint
interagency          projects           on the             of
methodologies for the            of the kinetics of     exposure.

          Clearly, it woyld be possible to        this  list  of relevant
         since mych of the scientific information utilized by  the
for regulatory decision-making     guidelines fomylatfon  rests on a
foundation of basic research.

-------
                                    -33-

Chapter 3

                                  IN THE             OF  LEAD

                             Kathryn


PREAMBLE

    The place of and           for long-systained basic research  activity
In the             of a foundation for constructive action in  important
problems in environmental  health coyld be Illustrated by reference  to  any
of several current                 He             the                  and
its dangers or toxlclty to       this purpose.       as § public  health
problem has                 for       Iff not centuries).  Yet howt what,
and      to do                                 Its        effects and
treating       not           have              only recently,  and only as  a
result of long-continuing       research.  For one thing, only long-range,
nwltidisciplinary, continuing basic          has giwen us the  varied tools
we      to             of the      subtle (yet           important! effects
of lead.  We                 counting             to worrying        things
like         behavior and               tn              children—but only
        we now                       for              of lead.   This      1s
the story of an               health                                 only
             slow-n»v1ng                     to explain]
        and           by far-sighted        who               long-ringe
         was and would          to be           cost-benefit


Background

    Understanding  the       of                                 by
exposure  has                    1n this centyry.           Into the  toxic
effects  of               a                his         the        discipline
of clinical and             toxicology for the      five
Fundamental mul ^disciplinary laboratory           1n             as
biochemistry  ana'physiology his      a najor  key  to this  progress,

          has  long                 to be  acutely  toxic  at
exposure.   In  addition, *e                       OB                 1n  tht
1970*s and                                      two         of
                                             of      on               it
levels        ont                    of  the                    of  the
                                         on  tht
          Is  in                           of

      cularly

     In children,                     to  lead,       as              1ngest1on
 of            paint, his            to       a
 characterized by       convulsions, and 1n                       In
 with                    to lead,                     a
 "wrist and       drop,"  and                         art the
 conseqyences.

-------
                                    -34-

    The challenge  has       tc    ".arstand that the       of health
       by lead was           e-.rns1ve      the clinically-obvious
     has      this challengi  esisdally difficult Is
lead pollution has      at            lewels,           an
byrden of      1n  a sizable portion  of the popylatlon.  During the 1970's
In metropolitan areas,  young  children frequently Nad
concentrations greater  than 40   g/dl;  a concentration     associated with
several neuropsychologlcal               The           Is to          the
etiology and severity of health               are so             are
considerad "normal."  Irs the           of      public        and
medicine                                 mortality iftd morbidity (i.e.,
     reports) to understanding  the                   This          reflects
and has been possible only         of lonf-ranfe support of enflronnentil
research.

                   exciting recent findings with         to understtndlng
of the toxicology  of      is  the realization           1s         of
producing toxic effects in  adults and children at relatively low levels of
          I.e.,  levels that  ire insufficient                    clinical
           Only a         igo             of
"sife*.       1s now            to          a           of             •
toxldty.

                    h«$                                            of
Is a                       Involving                          Th«
           red       cells, the                and -the         are the
              In


    In     early IfOO's                     so
        routinely                                              for
        (1935)               the        of                    to
poisoning for the                                              and  1133 wts
in        of 3400.  The        of              children* nho  art
sysceptible to the         of                                          In
the 194.0's         the  1%0's                     of                   of
the                   the              Prior to the              of
                                                             hi4  «
          rate of §51

                    of      poisoning                              1s  the
predominant,                  :*For                and      (1143)  and
clinicians                                    of
poisoning
sensory       deficits, and bthavloral dysfunctions.   Ptrlsteln and
(1966)                        1n 371 of          who
poisoning withoyt          of cncephiloptthy,

    Through                     to identify
                                 and                            to
                        of         to              clinical       of
toxicity                         a           control;
not                                                   clinical         of
intoxication,       identified «h!ch               ire               it

-------
                                    -35-
hlgh-dose exposures.   The  limited  reversibility or 1r reversibility his
documented fn many of the  clinically-reported, neurologic effects.  Using
these clinical  studies as  a  gylde,  long-range, multi disciplinary reseirch
has extended the understanding of  lead toxicity .to the  cyrrent emphasis on
btomarkers of exposure,  dose- response  relationships for specific effects,
and identification of sysceptible  subgroups  for these effects,
ResearchF ind i n gThe9 7 0*sinM9B(rs
    The general picture of adylt and pediatrlc  lead  poisoning has changed
in recent decades.  The overall  pattern is Identification  of significant
adverse health effects at progressively lower exposures.   These can be
arbitrarily separated Into neyrobehifloril ,  hematopoletlc, renil /endocrine,
and reproductive effects.  As a  part of this effort, differential
sensitivity of various sybpopylatlons has      revealed.   Identification of
effects occurring at environmental  exposyres      considered "normal1* has
coincided with redycing environmental exposures 'to lead.   Only  through
reduced exposures can the resylts given by toxicology and  epidemiology
research be evaluated in general hyraan populations.

    I.   Neyrobehavloral Effects

         Recognition that neurobehavloral effects in children  are produced
by lead exposures considered "normal" 1n eirlitr          (e.g., blood lead
concentrations of 20-50  g/dl ) has            tht      significant
findings in the  1970' s and      s.   Long1tud1nil studies during the
10-15 years built ypon early              and cross-sectional  studies.   The
longitudinal  prospective designs hate permitted gathering liproved
information on exposure histories.   Information on exposyre levels and
patterns is clearly  important 1n assessing  effects  of a cynulitlve toxicant
on endpoints  such as neyrobehavlonl function that nay reflect changes
induced at far earlier,  but  critical,                periods.

         The  most consistent finding of  the prospective studies is that an
association exists between low- level lead exposures during developmental
periods (especially  prenatal ly) ind  later deficits  1n neurobehavloral
ptrformance.   This  latter  1s reflected  by Indices      is the Bay ley Mental
Development Index,  a well-standardized      for  Infant Intelligence,  Blood
Itad  concentrations  of 10- IS g/dl  constitute  a  level of  concern for
effects  (EPA, 1986).   In addition,  Impaired neyrophyslologlcal function has
      issociated  with Increasing blood       concentritions      children.
These functional  deficits  Include  changes 1n the auditory brainstem evoked
potentials and evidence of lead-related         hearing acuity {Robinson  et
al.t  1985,  1987),  'These subcHnlcal toxic  effects  of      on  the central
nervous  system are  generally considered to  be  peminent and Irreversible,
and  they  are  associated with permanent loss of Intelligence ind
 irreversible  alteration 1n patterns of behavior.

          Belli     et il (1987)          significantly
                    on tht                          of              tn
 uppcr-«1ddlt  class                                 Itad  Itvels       1n  the
       of 10-25  g/dl,        adult
 It veil              10 ind 12  g/dl       on ttit         11

-------
                                    -36-

                for ttw                           tt i1f               It
     be                                              art
                         one                    of the
      of the                                   In tht        II

         The                           is               by
Typically, adults ire likely  to
nervous        effects.  In the  early  1980's  investigators       to call
          to "subcllnlcal"                       by         in
                 velocity in  lead          not             neurological
involvement        et al.,  1165).   In  the  197Q*s             et al. 11972,
1975}          the slowing of the                          velocity of the
       and ylnar        md                                         1n
                                                      70  g/dl.
Investigations of the                   of               an
        threshold,                    coordination, and       physiological
and psychological         1n         with  blood                     below'
80  g/dl        et al., 19751,

    II,

                his      i          of         clinical      poisoning in
     children and adults.                              of
                  1s now            to               In
children at              of 30  g/dl.                                 of
     and the           of           it i        of                   In
the            red       cells               the
                 to                 of                           1n
children.   The           for             In          1s            with a
                         of 15-18                 tt  al.,

                                                     1n          to
The accumulation of                IX           as                     or
as protoporphfrirt in               Is  not  only in           of
                  but      signals                       Injury,  The final
     of                          In the                   injyry to the
mitochondria can        a         of subcellylar
           and                      Implications of
include;                   of        to all                    cellylar
                                            of                   calcium
metabolism;                In               control;
detoxification of              and                     of
         (e.g.,            of

    111.

                                       1n  children          a
         with glucosurfa,              and                         to
          of the                                                to       in
          has                                           tnd
in adults.                               adults,  in                 for
               all              ill           (specifically,          of  the
         liver, and lungsj,               nephritis,  ind
                     (I.e.,               dye to                   not

-------
                                    -37-

                       in  a  longitydlnal       of         in      battery
plants tnd lead          (Cooper,  1985}.

         A statistically-significant             his
          In systolic tnd                          and           in
                        old,                  the        11
populitlon (Plrkle et *1,

         Impairment of the endocrine functions of the kidney
reported to occur at                                        of
effects required development of  several       of research;

              A.  Understanding  the metabolic activation of Vitamin D to
1,25-dihydroxyv1tam1n 0.   This metabolite  is critical to regulation of
calcium        Ism.

              B.  Recognition that"lead  Impairs various       1n
biosynthesis and function  of 1,25-diHydroxy¥ttam1n 0.

    Currently,  the      studied       at
         is the                     tubule of the kidney.
25-hydfQKjf¥itimin 0,        1n  liver             0,           a
hydroxylation       Is           by the        1,  ,2S-hydroxy¥lt«ft1n D
hydroxylase.                 in  vitro            (following In vivo
         of          to                                 1    iTEsTfhi
activity of this          Findings      a  clinical Investigation
      children                       1                      D  lt¥els
          in            to                                              to
                   of Itad,          1n                                  of
1,25-d1hydroxy¥itaffl1n 0 yp to levels similar to               1n  children
serving as controls        et al., 19801.
         has            1,25-d1hydroxy¥lta«1n 0
          with                                          i              of
           concentritions, 12 to 120                 et al.,  1982b).

    IV.

         Early  1n  the         a        of                 of       on
                                       with
      included                                                still-birth
rite, and  a higher,             and  early childhood mortality
children of
                    high,            I§ng1tyd1nal,
         to                                     of lead,
important              on              effects at the             of
               levels.             et al. (1986)             the           of
         deliveries         the  37th     of                 significantly
         to                      at delivery,
excluded,  the          of the                        The               of
         deli¥ery  a*         levels          In
of 14  j/dl or        MIS 8.7        the     it
yp to 8  g/dl.             1n             age at
                                             by          et  §1,  (1986),
           et al.  I1984J,        et §1. (1982), and            tt  al. I1987a,

-------
                                    -38-

b).  The      from            Indicate       for      10  g/dl          1n
                                                        58 and 601
          on the age of the

         The          of            et  al.                        in
in miscarriages and still  births In the high-lead                  In
contrast,           this
concentration was lower for still  births       for  11 we births.
         to              an

                   1n the               of       it low        1s of
           for the fields of                    and public health.  Until
recently,                           of  25   g/dl  and
      and         only five       ago the          for                 (CDC)
            25                         a            level            of
                          in children.        on  the basis of
         it 1s                                          In children at
levels       this guideline.  Thus,                     the  toxlclty of
lead it low       is       to       §       re-evalyatlon of
          for           the          of                  to

    The            of                                          the
tnat                                                           in  the
                          the                        and
            Survty                         In      9.11  of all
children In the               - 1,5 million          - hid
               of 25       or                tt  al.,  1982a).
          children the            of                           (high
                     wi$
          findings on the                 of
(high blood                                  In                  the
or» subcllnlcal      toxlclty,        a         of chill ing  significance.
      findings              9% of ill          in      nation,  and  251 of
minority children, may be suffering irreversible neurologic,  Intellectyal ,
and                       ts the result of chronic,                    to
lead.  The impl Nations of                           for public       and
environmental          ire

    This      has      a                            one of the
          and                                          It  1s  t
eontinyes        the         findings ind       implications.   It will
                                       only 1f the      of
        us to            are                                  ind
research Invtstigitlons on      toxlclty art it one and the
              the      justifiable and                      of
activities In the entire field of                                 So
has                  1n                    In             no            it
       of all the                        his
tet His                                    1n               has      off
           and Is still          It  Is      "apology" for
              we      can       for the        field of
health science,          may be the  specific       of             of
         for any one

-------
                                    -39-

REFERENCES

1.   Bellinger D.C,,  Neddlewan H.L, Leviton A., Waternayx C.,  iablnowltz
     H.B., Nichols M.L. (1984).  Early Sensory-Motor Development and
     Prenatal Exposure to Lead.  Neurobehav Toxlcol  Teritol  6:387-402.

2,   Bellinger D.C.,  Leviton A., Witernaux C,,  Neddleman H.L., Rabinowltz
     M.8. (19875,  Longitudinal Analyses of Prenatal and Postnatal  Lead
     Exposure and Early Cognitive Development.  New England Journal  of
     Medicine 316:1037-1043.

3.   Bornschein R.L.,  Syccop P.A., Dietrich K.N. ,  Krafft K.,  Sroti  J.,
     Mitchell T. , Berger 0.,         P. B. (1987a).   Prenatal-Lead  Exposure
     and Pregnancy Outcomes in the Cincinnati Lead Study.  In:  Linberg
     S.E., Hutchinson T.C., eds.  Internationil  Conference: Heavy Metals in
     the Environment,  V 1: September; New Origins, LA: Edinburgh, United
     Kingdom: CEP Consultants, Ltd., pp.  156-158.

4,   BornscNein R.L.,  Grote J, , Mitchell T.. Succop L., Shukli R. (1987b).
     Effects of Prenatal and Postnatal  Lead Exposure -on Fetal Maturation
     and Postnatal Growth.  In:'Smith M., Grant L.D.,      A., eds.  Lead
     Exposure and Child Development; An International
     Lancaster, United Kingdom: KTP Press.

5,   Byers R.K., Lord E.E.  (1943).        Effects of       Poisoning on  •
     Mental Development.   Am J 01s Child  66:471-483.'

6.   Cooper W.C., Hong 0.,  Khelfets L.  119851.  Mortality 1n           of
     Lead Battery Plants and Lead  Prodyctlon Plants,  1947-1980,  Sctnd J
          Environ Health 11:331-345.

7.   Dietrich K.M., Krafft K.M.,  Bier M.,        P.A., Berger 0.,
     Bornschein  R.L.  (1986).   Early Effects  of Fetil      Exposure:
     Neurobehavioral  Findings  at  6 'Months.   Int J.  Biosoc. Res.  8:151-168,

8.   U.  S. Environmental  Protection         (1986).   A1r  Quality  Criteria
     for Leid.  Research "Mingle  Park,  NC:   Office  of Health  and
     Environmental As$issa«nt,t Envlronnental Criteria ind
     Office:  EPA         No,  EPA-iOO/8-83/02iif-df,  4»,  Availible  from:
     MTIS, Springfield,  VA: PB87-142378,

9.   Hoffman  F.L.  (1935).   Liad Poisoning Statistics  for 1933,   Am J Public
     Health  25(2;       1190-100.

10,  Mahaffty K.R.» Annest J.L. ,         J.,  Murphy  R.S,  (1982a). «§t1ona1
     Estlmetes  of            Levels.   United States, 1978-1980.          New
     Engl  J  Med 307:573-579.

11.  Mahaffey  K.R. ,        J.F. ,         R.W.,  Peeler J.T.,        c.M.,
             H.F. U992b).   Association-Between
     Concentration  and       1,25-d1hydroxycholeco1c1ferol  Ltvels  1n
     Children,  to J  CHn  Nytr 35:1327-1331.

-------
                                    -40-

12.              A,J.,  Vlipani  G.V.,            E.F,»           P.A.,  Clark
     P.O.  11986).   The Port Plrle Cohort                              and
                        J  Epidemiology                  40:18-25,

13.         M.R. ,          A.t         S.J. ,           A,,          I.M..
     Maconesplc  H.,       R. ,  Low A,  {19821,                of           and
     Infant      Exposure In Glasgow.         Med J  27:113-122,

14.   National           Council  (1972).  Airborne      in Perspective.
     Washington, O.C.             on Medical  and Biological  Effects  of
     Atmospheric Pollutants,

15.   Perlstfiln M.A.,         i,  (1966).                       of           In
     Children. Clin

16.   PlomelH  S.,         C.»  Zyllow D,, Curnn A..          B. {1982}.
     Threshold for             to      Synthesis 1n       Children,  Proc
     Natl       Sci  USA 79;3335-333i.

17.   fHrkle J.L.,         J.t Landis J.i., and        W.R.          Thi
     Relationship                    Ltvels and                and  Its
     Cirdiovascyltr Risk Implications. Aw Jr of           121:246-258,

18.         J.D.,        B.B., Nicholson J.  (1975).                     of
                            to        y.  S.            of Health,
     and Welfare.                     for                      and
                 0, C.

19.            G. ,          S.,           D.,        C.t           S. i.,
           P.»      O.A. (1985).  Effects of Low to
     on           Auditory        Potentials 1n Children,
               WHO          Office  for          pp. 177-182.
                     3).

20.            G.S.,       R.H. ,            R.L.,      O.A, (1987).
     of Environmental               on the                            as
             by tnt                                     and
                         In       Children,  In:          S.E.,
     T.C.,                                              in the Environment,
     VI:            New Orleans,  LA:                            CEP
                  Ltd., pp. 223-225.

21.         J.F.,         R.y.,         A.,        H.F..         K.R.
     (1980).           In 1,25-dlhdroxyvltatftlri  D In Children
     Lead              New  Enfl  J  Wed  302:1128-1131.

22.               A.M.,           S.  (1972).                       for
                Sybcl1r»1cal                   ir J  Ind  ted

23.               A.M., Tola  S.»          S.,       S,  (1975). Subcllnlcal
                it "Sift"         of                     Environ
     30:180-183.

-------
                                    -41-

24.         T., Ferrari  E.,  Colucci d'A.C.  (1965).  Velocita de Conduzione
             Net Satyrnlni. Folia Med. (Napoli)

-------
                                    -42-

        4
                                   WITH
                           TO
 PREAMBLE

     In  this         a        of                      of the
 basic/long-term                        applications to
 environmental                  (especially 1n humans).  This      not
           the                of
 will  or       be of                to                             It Is,
, however,  in         at  carefyl choices of       studies which
                        for the          of this             their
 applications could                   on               health.  As
 then, this is  a look at the      and                        of
                                              has           1n the

-------
                                   -43-

                           Of                 BY
INTRODUCTION

                    are cellular            are
       and                                         initially            as
the transduced          of       trinsfoming retrovirysts (1).
studies                                      can      be           to
       causing          by                        of retrovlril
involvenent (2-4).                   Include                 or      DMA
                    as                or      amplifications.   The
actlvition of                by                             1n
levels of expression of            protein product, or 1n        or
levels of            of in          protein,


           Of

    The activation  of                In             and
              and 1n             has              1n
the                                    In               for
               Imply                   of           are           by
                     and      this                    is in             fri
      Induction (5-6K -Alternatively,          of            and
                                        is          1n
            (7-9),   The         of                           bt           1n
the                   of           1s         at           The
low                  of  at        two            r«s and      «re        for
the                        of                celTTTji       (10),
             in          to the            of                  the      of
specific                          is                            be t
              1n                           (ID,   The             of
                    1n             win bt           1n       of
              of                          to

    The            of rt$                          to           one      1n
the nwltistep         ~of~carc1nogenes1s  for a  variety of         and
       (5,61,  The activation of     by point           1s          an
early       1n               and  may be  the "Initiation"       1n
        Thus, a                                     by            of ras_
                cm potentially       §ne     of the
1n                to the cNeufcal.   Is this                       to
classify the          as a
                                  rajj                          In
                               {6}.   The             of                  !n
the             of              Is  uncltir at          is  will as
the non-jras                1n              can be           by           or
radiat1on~T6K

-------
                                    -44-



                   are  classified  as potentially  hazardous  to        on the
basis of long-term caret         s  stydies  In  rodents.   While       rodent
tarcinogenesis stydies  are  often designed  to  tninic  the  route of
exposure in     environment or workplace,  the      of  a given  chemical is
usually higher than that  which actually  occurs  in human exposure.  Coupled.
with the appearance of  species- and strain-specific spontaneously occurring
       in vehicle-treated rodents, this  complicates the extrapolation of
rodent carcinogenic      to       risk.           analysis  of  tymors  from
spontaneous origin and  from long-term carcinogenesis studies should help
          the mechanisms  of       formation  at  a  molecular  level.  For
instance, the finding of  actiwating mutations in  different        of  the
H-ras_      in furan-induced liver         versus finding activating
mutations in only one       of the H-ras     in             Hver
        that the chemical Itself activated the  H-ras proto-oncogine by a
genotoxic event (12).  In general, comparison of  patterns of
activation in spontaneous versus chemically-induced rodent  tumor?,
with cytotoxic information, should be helpful In  determining          the
chemical in question is nutageniCj cytotoxic, has a receptor
          of promotion, or      combination  of        (and             of
action.  This type of anilysls might be of particular  Importance for
          such as furan     furfural 112,13)  which      negative  for
rnytagenlcity in short-term bioassays.
APPLICATION TO       OF

    Another          which should be helpful 1n species-to-species
extrapolation of risk from carcinogenic      is to examine oncogens
activation and expression in tymors from different                 by the
     agent.  For example, K-ras           with the activating lesion In
      12 were          In boWrat §nd                   Induced by
titranttromethane {14}.  Even        little 1s             the ONA
properties of this         ,                         this          is
acting in  the             to               1rt      nts and mice.
The role of chemicals and radiation in the activation of                 by
     amplification,             translocatlon, and other        sis which
can alter      expression, is currently       Investigated by
groups.  Also, as        life      increases, it                        to
      chemical-Induced             of  the progression of        to
malignant          These and similar            to explore the
by which                          in                      may             of
the uncertainty  In risk  analysis  of        carcinogenic

-------
                                    -45-

REFEREMCES

1.          JM.        Viral             Cell;  42:23-38.

2.   Varmus HE.  1984.  The Molecular Genetics  of  Cellular
     Annual Rev        _18:553-612.

3,   Weinberg RA,  1985,  The  Action  of           in  the  Cytoplasm and
     Nucleus.  Science;  23Q;?7Q-77i,

4.   Bishop JM.  1987.  The Moleuclar Genetics  of  Cancer,
     Science; 235:305-311.

5,   Baroacid M.  1987,  las        Ann Rev of          56,  in  press.

6,            M,  Reynolds S. Activation of           by Chemical
     Carcinogens  in:   The Pathology of Neoplasia.   A Sirica, ed, Plenum
     Press, N.Y.,  N.Y.  {In       1988J.

7.           GM,         1C,         M,        HE,        JM.
     Amplification of i-myc  in                          Correlated with
                             Science 224:1121-1124.

8.          RC,          GM,  Sather H, Dal ton  A,         SE,      KY,
             D,  1985,  Association of Multiple        of the
              With       Progression of Neuroblasts, The New
     Journal of           313:1111-1116.

9.          OJ»  Clark GM,      SG» Levin WJ,  Ullrich A,         HL.  198?,
           Breast Cancer;  Correlition of Relapse and Survival  With
     Amplification of the                             235:117-182.

10.  Land H, Parada IF, Weinberg RA. 1983. Tuntorigenie  Conversion  of
     Primary Embryoflbroblasts Reqyires at       Two Cooperating
                Nature (London) 304:596-602.

11.  Barrett JC,           M, Koi M,  198?. Role of           and Tymor
     Sypressant       1n a Multistep       of Cardnogenesls, In:
     Syraposiyin on fundanental Cancer Research. Volume 38  (F. Becker,
     ed.,), in press.

12.           SH, Stovers SJ, Patterson R,          RR,          SA,
              MM. 1987,                      in B6C371       Liver
     Tymors:  Implications  for Risk                     237:1309-1316.

13.  Tennant RW, Margolin BH,  Shelby MD,  Zeiger E,          JK, Spalding J,
     Caspary W, Resnick M,  Stasiewica  S,          B, Minor  R. 1987.
     Prediction of           Carcinogenicity  in         fran ln_ Vjj£0
             Toxicity Assays,          236:933-941.

14.          SJ, Glover  PL,        LR,           RR,           SH,
              MW. 1987.  Activation of  the K-ris                1n  Kit and
            Lung Tynors  Inductd by  Chronic           to  Tetranitrotftethane,
             Res 47:3212-3219.

-------
                                    -46-

                        AMD

                            Fredertct P.
INTRODUCTION

             in                in molecylir biology  and  biochemistry
          the             of                               to         of
                          to          carcinogens.         highly
techniques can        and                    the internal       of
carcinogens (the        of the carcinogen or Its ieTaSoWtFTFF
and fluids) or the b1_oT£g1cainy_ effect 1ve_      {the             has
           with eel TlTTaTiSaTn^TeTilTCrTucTrTs ON A,  IN* or protein)  in
              or a             This             of                 could  be
especially valuable in         of        etiology by  providing a
mechanistically relevant link                                on the  one
     and clinical          on the                    molecular
     in         and             the potential to
              of risk in          to                         of a
carcinogenic        to                     applications of     "adduces
research" could directly                              at EPA for
          of          and risk to

    Various         are available to         Ch«i1c4l-8pec1f1c lesions
(such as              for ONA and                  as well as
specific biologic alterations (such is                     or         cell
mutations).  -Table 1 jives          of currently available         for
          the biologically                of               As c§n readily
be       all pertain to
genetic toxlclty.  Moreover,        all available                on readily
es for the                       itself,                 limitations,
biological              significant potential             In        etiology
and risk

-------
                                    -47-
         Tabl« 1.            of       Biologic            Methods
     End Point                                                    F1jd
Biologically affective
                                              ing,  fluor-            HBC
                                Spectrottetry
          (protein)                                                  RBC
                                   analysis,  HPLC,  gas
                        chroma togriphy
  Excised               HPLC,
  UDS                   Oil  cylture,                           •     WBC
  SCE                                                                WBC
  Mcronyclil
                                                                     WEC
   rations
          cell          Autorid1o§riphyf light                       MBC

  Somatic, cell                                                       RBC
   tglycophorin A)
        quality         Analyses of count,             motlHty
               See            1  fas
                   cells;                                 cells;
                      DMA            HPLC»Hlgh

-------
                                    -48-
                   and                                      the       of
                      1n the      5       and  Illustrate  a        of
          and limitations        to biological          1n         (2,3).
    The biologic rationale for           DMA          is            lesions,
if unrepaired, can         a      mutation.   Thtre  1s consfderabli
                   In         cells "Initiates"  the                    of
               (4,5); but 1t nay      result  in             of        to the
                (6,7).                         resulting  In
may                                              1n
(8,9,10).

    Protein      as            can, 1n theory, act  is a      readily
available           for DMA.  Proportional Ity         protein  and DMA
binding has                   for a       of             (11,12,13).

    Addycts are generally monitored 1n peripheral  blood  cells  rather than
       tissue,           for only § few             {e.g.,
and els platinum) is                          ind/or
           lewels ire        at            {14,151,
METHODS

    Techniques to         carclnogen-ONA         Indyde               ysing
adduct-speciflc polyclonal or monoclonal
                                                                and
  P-post1abell1n§,  Carcinogen-protein         nay be
antibodies and gas                                    The sensitivity  of
the DNA to                1s in the       of out        per 10 -10
nucleotldes.   Those               it carcinogen-protein
quantification also        to               sensitivity for
        (16).                       Identification of particular DNA
        at low levels Is difficult with         analytical
          cross-reactivity of                  as the BPPE-I-DNA antibody
nhich              closely related polycycllc
                           in definitive characteriiatlon of         (17).
       AND

    Experiment*!         Involving              chronic          to
                            the relationship                           and
macromolecular binding Is genenlly linear with few            (12,2,18,3).
With         to         carcinogen-DMA and -protein
Investigated in       populations with                as cigarette
PAHs,         and       nut,         iflatoxln and i-nltrosamines, c1s
platinyn, psoralen, 4-a«1nobiphenyl, propylene oxldt, vinyl  chlor1de°^"nd
                (3).

-------
                                    -49-

                       far         the feasibility and          sensitivity
of the         1n       of                     are                    by
              ability  1n the                                 of
controls, and
illustrate            is significant variability  In  the           of
               and -protein                 Individuals with
         or                   115,19-25).                             1n
the               involving                         Is
levels of         ire            1n so-called           controls"
(19-20,26-29).       of                                             for
risk

             stm         1n the                          to         DMA
and                 1n                      and
potential in a        of               Include:        identification,
              of            in¥0l¥ed in                             risk
extrapolation and improving the       and tlweliness of
{19,26,30-321.
             1s        1n the following

    A.   Inter!aboratory validation of         as ftas
         recently for                      (331.

    B.            on the stabllHty of         1n

    C.                 of           Inter-Individual            In
         levels.

    0.            on the             of         In         cells and
         tissues.

    E.              of        levels 1n QUA                as well  as  1n
                                        for a        of different
         of

    F,                  of critical       or "hot        on DMA
                 to the                            of

    G.                            of DMA and                formation
         (e.g.,        and         with       and chronic          to  the
               compound!s)},

    H.                and               on the relationship
         formation,      mutation, and           activation.

    1.   Longitudinal         (experimental and        on the relationship
                         levels  and                        risk.
         would be molecylar  epidemiologies!          In       populitlons
         (sych as                  to  high                   §nd who
         experience a high      of secondary cancer, or htawily-exposed

-------
                                -50-

            groups).   Biologic         could be  drawn at  the  outset  and
            for future analysis,

J.                 to        as archives of       blood, urine,  and
     tissye for retrospective analysis.

-------
                                    -51-

KEFERENCES

1.          F. 1987,                   Epidemiology:   A New Tool  In
            Prevention, J      Cancer Inst, 78,

2.         GN,          NJ. 1985.           and                       of
              to           Chew-Heals,  Environ                  62, 5-18.

3.          F.  The Significance of DMA and                 in
     Bi§monitQrin§ Studies.  Hut Res (1n pressj.

4.             IB, Gattonl-CelH S, iClrschiteler P,         M.       W,
            J, Jeffrey A.                    Cardnogenesls Involves
     Hyltiple       and Multiple                    cells  1.  The
                                               Laboratory,  Nw York, pp.


i.   Harris CC»        Future Directions In the Use of DMA         as
                         for                           to
              and Carcinogens.  Environ                 §2, 185-191.

6,   Hennings H,        R,      ML,          EF,        R,       SH
     Malignant Conversion of       Skin        Is           by Tynor
     Initiators and            by                          (London), 304,
     67-69.
7.           E. 1i84.                         1n
                                                 738, 219-236.

8.          FA, Kidlubar FF. 1985.  Forntitlon and             of Arylaiini
     DNA          In  Vivo,   Environ                  62 ,

i.             CO,         KH, Phillips DH,       Activation of c-Ha-ras-1
     Proto           by  In _Vfjro Modification with the Cheiical Carcinogen,
                     01 o*PfipoxTle ,         {London}, 310,

 ID.            K,         R,          R,        K.        DMA         in
                                   J.        Res CUn       ,  112,181-188.

 11.             L,            E,  Osteman-Golkirt       G.  1983,
     of tenotoxlc        and                Relationships of Their Effects.
               Res  123,

 12.          HG.                   and               Relationships, 1n:
      Berlin A,        M,          K,  Ysalnio H  (Eds.), Monitoring
               to              and                 -I ARC Sci,  Pybl No 59,
      Ly§n»  pp. 115-128.

 13.          HG.                  of           as  a               for
      Alitylatlng md Arylitlnf               Toxlcol,  56,  1-6.

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                                    -52-

14.           SJ,           MW.                   and             of
                                                                     S2P


15.        E,        SH.  Zwelllng  LA,        RF,  Polrter MP.
     Quantitatlon of                              II (ds platln)
     -DNA-tntrastrand         1n Testlcylar and
                                       J  Pin         77,

16.              SR,         PL.         Biological         to the Evalyitlon
     of Risk;            of             1n               lexical, 4,
     S367-S370.

17.            RM.             of New             for           of
                        to       Population Monitoring.          its
     (1n press).

18.   Polrler MC»         FA,  1987,                 of
                            1n         and              Exp            31,
     1-10.

19.          F,          Rt          HK,        AR,        M»         0,
           H, Van       J,         DMA                          and
                        In                    and             J
            Inst.

20.          f,          K,       TL,        D, Kelly G,         RM.
     1987b,             of Polycycllc                                   In
                 Cells  of

21.                            K,                  RR,        CC.
               of                           1n                  Cells.
                 45,

22.          A,        G,          C,            K» Trfvtrs GE»        HJ,
     Harris. CC.                      of Polycycllc                      1n
     the Urine,                                          in
     and            to the         in
     to                  of Polycycllc                      In  the
                         Rts 46, 4178-4183.

23-          MS,          PL,           SR,         M. 1987.
             of                 in         and
     Cancer Res 47,

24.        IP,       HF.       32p                       Of           DMA
             1n       Oral         Cells.                 7»  111-5-1120.

25.   Phillips DH,       A,        PI.                  DNA          1n
     Human             and Perlphtral  Blood             Carcinogenests    7,
     2071-2075.

26.           BA.  1980.   An          to the            of the  Risk  to Han
          DNA                        Toxicol,        3:271-281.

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                                    -53-

27.   Wright AS.   1983.   Molecylar Dosimetry Techniques 1n       Risk
                  An Industrial Perspective, in:        AW, Schnell  RC,
     Miya TS {Eds.).               in the Science and Practice of
     Toxicology.  Elsevier,            pp.  311-318,

28.   Tornqvist M, Os       Golkar S, Kaytiainen A, Jensen A,  Farmer
     PB» Ehrenberg L.  1986,   Ttssye       of Ethylene Oxide  in Cigarette
             Determined      Adduct Levels  in Hemoglobin.
     Carcinogenesis, 7, 1519-1521.

29.           RB,           RM, Santella RM, Cefalo RC, Avltts TA,
               R 1986.   Detection of Smolcing Related Covalent ONA Adducts
     in       Placenta,  Science 231, 54-57,

30,           BA,             BE,           IB. Banbury        1982.
     Indicators of Genotoxic Exposyre; Report No. 13. Cold Spring Harbor .
     Lab, Cold Spring Harbor, NY.

31.   MAS Briefing Panel. 1983.  Report on       Effects of Hazardous
     Chemical Exposures.  National       Sci, Washington, DC.

32.   Sobsel FH,  1982.  The Parallelogram;  An Indirect          for the
                of Genetic Risks  from Chemical Mutagens.   In; Progress in
     Mutation Research (Bora KC» Douglas GR-,          ER.  eds.).  Elsevier,
                pp. 323-327,

33,   Santella Rm»        A,        F, et al. 1987, Intelaboratory
     Comparison on Antibodies and  Immunoassays  for Benzo[a]pyrene Diol
     Epoxide-i Modified DMA.  (Submitted).

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                                   -54-

    Ep1demiolog1cal          1n                      long-term          to
         can                                  which,           on the
       and          of            can                 of               §nd
                  to      and personality          to        and
irreversible                                                to be an early
     of         neurotoxldty.                      led the  international
                          to call  for                  for  Identifying and
                                          1n                and 1n
clinical


             OF          AND

    An      of                                   to
applications to this         1s the              of         §nd
The      of this field  1s to            how                function is
        out by the                as  well  as  how various neuropithological
conditions,      is  Alihelier's         and Korsakoff's
cognitive                        1n           of                      Is
               By                 fully i          of all          in the
basic               is            with the  neyroblology of leirnlng ind
         It 1s not surprising                    1n this     1s occurring
it a                   This       will  briefly highlight     specific
                    in  this field                  i
on neyrotoxicological

    Analysis of the neyrob1o1o§y of leirnlng  his
                      (1) key brain         I.e.,       brain         are
essinttil for different       of         (2)         "circuits" in the
brain, I.e., the             of
information results 1n the            of                              and
{3}                      1.t., the        of  the
      during learning,  and the             and cellulir           which
under!1ne        The first of             has hid, as  one of  Its
concerns, the         of how to             from animal        of cognitive
dysfunction to                  The latter two
primarily with analyzing the                      at      molecular  levels,
In the      5-7 years,          discoveries                in ill        of
             in the      of extrapolation            two forms.   One has
      to  develop behavioral       in animals which are                to
      which are      to        cognitive function 1n          The
 form, and  the one which we will           here, has      to apply

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                                    -55-

behavloral        to        which  are           to        which  ire will
                 behivforally and neuroblologically,  in           For
         It has recently                  delafed-non-mitching-to-saiiple, i
     which is i           indicator of                             with
limbic        and frontal  cortical         in       and prinates,  1s also a
sensitive indicator of                     with similar                in  .
      clinical                               is  the            use of
         conditioning to         learning  deficits,
and Alzheimer's          which               by                         of
eyeblink conditioning 1n  rabbits.                           1n
                       establish a                        link         the
             analysis of  cognitive             1n          and  its
           to                             research,        at validating the
appH       of       new                to the         of risk
will substantially                  "on the         of how
can be      to              risk  to       populations, following
to solvents and                     pollutants.

    The        important                                          the
sophistication of neyrotoxlcological            1s the Identification  of
neural circylts sybserving learning.  The             of this 1s the
neurobiologlcal       of                  conditioning.  This Pawlovlan
conditioning             has                 for neurotoxlcologlcal
             including:  (a) the         of           of  Its
properties, which       It          to
associative          to                                            In  a
single experimental preparation;  (b) the ability to directly
qyantltative          of               and           behawlor,  on-line  and
in real time;  (c) the ability to directly         the           of
conditioning In §nfrails'and         (d) the      of
electrophysiologlcil                               loci  for,  In the
brain EEG activity               scilp
Important           offered by this                             1s  the
       of                we now            Its  essential        circuitry
in the brain      and              ye also      a                the
effect of                        on this      of              and this
freatly          oyr ability to           the                 of
neurotoxicologlcil              If an                           a
behavioral effect, we      i           of       to look  for Its
              and                 effects, and ylt1»ate1y its            s)
of action.  Conversly, 1f a                   an effect  on a
or                         we           functional              to       for
in       of the       of            or cognitive           which       be
impaired.       Investigators                    to use  Pavlovian
           of  this kind as               in the neurotoxicologlcal
                     just this      (1987), the
has      applied to the study of                     with aluminum
toxicity.
    One final             which is       mentioning is the use of the i_n
vitro brain slice technique to study neural plasticity,
ITicTrophysiological studies of hlppocampal slices                i
                 long      potentlation (LTP),       has        very
influential as an                    for studying the synaptic

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                                   -56-

of learning.   In LTP       1s, In effect, in          In          efficacy
            *1th                               of the cellular ind
                      of LTP               a              of i
              (the                      or
            of the               nay         the           of LTP, ind may
disrupt cognitive function 1n rats.       1s      of       may      be
of                                          leg.,
chemicals).   It is  likely                              in this
                              may be      as a       of
          for their          ability to                               and
of characterizing the                            of any
      are foynd.
SUMMARY

    In                                   of                    1n
                               i           for the analysis of
                               1s            at      a
             Importantly,  a          level.                       It  1$
possible to «i                         scientific subdlsciplines,
including cell biology,                ,               neyrophyslology, and
            ind                   1n i             and      way  to
(a) identify the ri»k                                                  to
n§rm¥Fc¥pTt1 ve function  or  (b)              the      of         of
                as the          wKTcF^reTiown to                loss,
         and

-------
                                    -57-

USE OF                       IN

                                                  of
which his         for application to a      variety  of
                     2 for      others).   This          will
new applications in neyrotoxlcity.



             to a foreign                 elicits  an
              by production of                         are        proteins
that       with                    are                           of
inducing antibody formation).        anttgenic            can
viruses, bacteria, proteins, or                         like envlronnental
chemicals.  Ant1gen-antibody reactions ire highly  specific,
the      specific       to biology.   It 1s this  specificity of  the
intigen/antibody         that has      exploited by  the
scientist with applications ranging      curing  Polio  to  understanding  the
molecular       of        catalysis.

    Antibodies are          in the      by B lymphocytes  (B-cells), each of
which          its own        antibody.  In theory,  as      as  10 million
antibodies cm bt          by a        1n           to  a  single antigen.
                     with a                               an           an^
             contains                           one  B-cell can
                   only one         but       are       B-cells
                        epitope, this fs           to  as a polyclonal  (many
cells) antibody.

    The            fusion           of Kohler and  Milstdn,  for which
         the            Prize, was          to          the  1 Imitations
           with the use of polyclonal antibodies (e.g., con     nation,
heterogeneity, limited supply).   The antibodies           by Kohler and
Mil stein      referred to as monoclonal                           by  a
single {mono} B-cell line {clone},             antibodies
           including:  1)          speclfldy       clone         only one
specific antibody}; 2) unlimited sypply                 largi         of
antibody and can be      Indefinitely); and 31  purified antigens are  not
         for the production of      antibodies              by  definition
          only a single antlgenlc determinant).

    ftonoclonals                 to define, localize,  purify,  quantify,  and
modify antigens.  The      distinction         the yse of monoclonils,  is
         to polyclonal antibodies, is                  confer  fir
precision and accuracy and are available as essentially         , off  the
shelf reagents.  Thus, It 1s now possible to define          with §  greater
       of certainty                    This          tnit of monoclonals
has      it  far        to identify  rare               in vivo and ir»  vitro
(e.g.,         tissue cell       and        typing 1n celTTiTltureTT """One"
example  of the application of monoclonals that is relevant to     EPA is
the usi  of specific monoclonals to  identify dioxin           In
contaminated soils.  Trye pyrficition  of antigens from
         (e.g., strum, tissue) also  is  now possible with aonoclonals.   Thus,
rare  factors or hormones,       as interferon, can now be eisily          in

-------
                                    -58-

                 Likewise,                 of           in
H             to                                    polyclonil
an                     chorlonfc               for                   8y
          specific                            modification of toxtdty or
               also     be  realized.            are           of  dlfoxln
         (with antibody to  dlgoxin),  and                 with
       linked to                      to        cell  antigens.
             of Monoconal sto
    The       of          on nonoclonal                  followed        and
Milstein's original        in 1975 are now beginning to revolutionize
ntyrobioloay by providing the tools with       to            the
cellulir and subcellular organization of the                  Thus,  the
      Impact of            antibody technology on              has       the
            identification of           cell         1n the
        monoclonal s      now               which identify previously
                of         and g11i (the       cell        of
tissue! which           would not        to be different yslng classical
           of light or electron microscopy.  Monoclonals      also
crucial for the Identification and                  of
                and                      to                  differences
within the      nolecule.  For example,  monoclonal antibodies
         that reveal phosphate-containing        nonphosphate-contalnlng
neuro filaments, the major strycturil {filament)           of ill neurons,
The significance of this                    i.e., the         or
of a single            1s      this              may be         to  i
¥ariety of neurological                 Including Alzheimer's          and
also may           i                  to Injury of the

    In neyrotoxlcology »  It 1s            toxicant-induced Injyry to the
           or                             1s            by alterations In
the                  of  specific                 regions.  Furthermore,
within an          region, the          to injury nay
cell                                distinguish the         cell
comprising the                                             by monoclonal
antibodies,                       cm be       to detect, localize and
             ce'-jlar           to                        This can  be
             by a                 as
are      as specific         for microscopically localizing specific
         within                                       animals.
Quantitative       are          with the      antibodies by using
monoclonal-bised                     Thus,  through the yse of monoclonal
           in                         /blochenlcal cvalyatlon of
neurotoxicity may  eventyally be             The possibility      exists
the sensitivity and specificity of  monoclonal  antibodies can be applied to
the           and              of                   into  the cerebrospinal
fluid  and blood is a              of neurotonic             Theoretically ,
it would             possible to         1nexpert$l¥e monoclonal -anti body
                for            neurotoxlcity In the
population.

     In summary, it is  clear  that  cyrrent          in     neurosciences will
continue  to  re¥ea1 the extensive  cellylir  and  subcellular  heterogeneity of
the                       on  the yse of  monoclonal antibodies.   The  EPA, by

-------
                  -59-
      in                     will         by        the
to       mS

-------
                                    -60-

    A       problem In environmental  health           1s the non-Invasive
          of small                  or                 at early
         applications  of                            hold         for just
                In  the few       since  liuterbyr1$  fij       was published,
                   (MR)         his         rapidly into an
clinical           and, also,  a               of          potential*
        with high field,                          (1.5  to 4,7 Tesla) are
available              ind ire          for              and laboratory
animals                                                            the
        of        density, relaxation tines, and                the
acquisition of 3-dlraensfonal
              types,                             of        and allow the
            of            or  perfyslon  (2-5).   for         of           and
       Intensity, the                  (proton) Is         for the
production of.orictically all  MR Images,   The abilities,to
nyclei (e.g.   Ma]  and chemically shifted nude!  (e.g.  H  In
fat}                        ind      the versatility  and
          of the

    Present day        MR        of              and  laboratory animals
                        detail that,  in      applications  {biologic
          and small animals),             microscopic  levels.  In
publications (6,7),        of frog      and  plant
with                 {voxels)  of 0.2  and 12.0 L,  respectively.
                are                             it       Un1«r$ity  In
chemically                         as       as 100  I  in
       1n fits.  The ability to                           in  live
              Imaging          (is long as 6 hours!,                 fields
and gradients,               pylse            and little or  no  relttlwe
motion.          respiratory        1s                    the          to
the liver,  the list       {no         1s              by            the
       , y$ing a         anesthetic, and synchronizing signal  acquisition  to
respiratory        (8,9).

         of the            of MR         are        to       of
techniques, and                  are unique.  Similar to
            {CT} scans, MR imaging 1s non-Invasive ind may  be
multiple       on  the      anlia! or patient.  In toxicology  experiments,
for example,     Incorporation of MR Imaging of a       of animals  could
provide important  Information concerning        organs*       to lesion
{e.g.,  tumor)              and          to           or  modified
(e.g.,              or            of  lesions).  MR
animals per                    with conventional       for
similar information.

    While  Imaging                  on Ionizing radiation are well
established,  rapidly           (a distinct                    to MR Imaging

-------
                                    -61-

it its               of development),  and  excellent  for  demonstrating
         structures or               (e.g.,       lesions containing  calcium
deposits,                     MR        has       distinct  and  Important
advantages.  With eurrtnt and anticipated           fields,  gradients,  and
RF signals, and with the proper precautions MR  imaging 1s considered
for patients and technicians (10).   Additionally,  the MR signil,  unlike the
penetrating       of Ionizing radiation, contains  Information 1n  addition
to      of tissue (in this case,        density.   The signal 1s
           by the       at which        relax  1n  relationship,to the
nolecylar lattice (Tl, spin-lattice, longitudinal  relaxation! and to
other (T2, spin-spin, transverse relaxation).
are Influenced by the          composition of  the  tissue {probably by  the
       and motional          of       molecults},  the resyltlng       can
permit distinction of              are similar  In         density  but differ
In relaxation

    Although not a consistent finding, malignant         frequently     Tl
and 12 relaxation       greater           of benign        or  ndmil
tissue,                          concerning the           Inability of MR
Imaging (relaxation        to distinguish          pathologic entitles
               (111.  This nay be partially related  to the  acqyisltlon of
the signal from tissue si lets that,        of  slice thickness, Include
             and normal       within and adjacent  to the lesion of
Interest.  In animal             it     University, this possibility  is
being explored by excising very thin (only 1,26 mn thick) tissue  slices 1n
rats.  While signals           thin slices art       and  Imaging sessions
are relatively long, the thin sections with high  resolution greatly  Improve
the selectivity, and, hopefully,, the discriminating ability of  the


        AND

    In clinical medicine, MR Imaging cowpllmtnts  and frequently        the
performance of other Imaging methods.   MR  imaging  excel!s In demonstrating
ntoplastlc, dentyellnating, and degenerative           of the central
        system,          of the sy$cetib1Hty  of  the thyroid md
parathyroid glands to Ionizing radiation,  MR  imaging is  a preferred
for      nation of       tissues.  Respiratory  and cardiac  gating
     to prodyce excellent diagnostic       of  the heart,,  thoracic blood
vessels, and lungs.  MR        of liver,  kidney,  reproductive organs,  and
pelvis routinely             a variety of  neoplastlc and non-neap!astic
processes.  Current and futyre             will  incorporate the  use of
faster scanning sequences, 3-dlraenslonil  Imaging,             of  perfyslon
and flow, contrast        Imaging         with jjn vitro spectroscopy  of
different nyclei (e.g.,  1PS   C,   Nas   FJ»  chem1caT~sh1 ft Imaging (e.g.,
permitting          proton        of  H. 1n              fat), and,
possibly, myltinuclear Imaging (e.g.,   P,   N).   These  developments,  in
addition to Improving  the sensitivity of detecting lesions, will  allow
Imaging to be          with j_n vivo metabolic  studits      can  characterize
biochenical activities 1n a "FegToi~of interest.

    In toxicologic experiments, techntqyes                     that allow
prolonged anesthetization of rats  (as long is 6 hours)  associated with
respiratory and cardiac      synchronization  for thoracic and abdominal

-------
                                    -62-

imaginf.   High field         (300 MHz,  7  Tesla)  are being developed and
       that      a theoretical  resolution of 10  M.         of active
         include the             of RF  coil  designs, and the use  of
stronger field gradients, surface and implanted  coils, and contrast agents.
Within a few years, increases in resolution  should  permit, for example,  the
visualization of renal glomeryli, preneoplastic  hepatocellular foci,  and
nyclei in the br§in.  With      developaents,  Lauttrbur's closing
in his 1973 paper would      remarkably prophetic,  "Zeugmatographic
techniques should find      useful applications  in  studies of the internal
structures, states, and compositions of microscopic objects,"

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                                    -63-

REFERENCES

I.   Layterbuf PC.       Formation by         Local Interactions:
              Employing Nuclear          Resonance,         1973;
     242:190-1,

2.          CJ»        WR. The Evolution of Nuclear Magnetic Resonance.
     In:   Introduction to Magnetic Resonance  Imaging,  Denver;  Multi-Media
     Publishing,  Inc. 1984:1-12.

3.   Andrew ER. A Historical Review of NMR and  Its Clinical Applications.
     Br Ned Rev 1984;40;115-9,

4.   Damadian R.  Tumor Detection by Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Science
5.   Lauterbur PC.  Cancer Detection by Nuclear Magnetic Resonance
     Zeygmatographic  Imaging.  Cancer  1986 ;57: 1899-1904.

6.   Aguayo JB, Blackband SJ, Schoeniger J, Mattingly MA, Hinterraann M,
     Nuclear  Magnetic            Imaging of  a  Single  Cell.   Nature
     1986 ;322: 190-1.

?,   Johnson  GA,  Brown J. , .Kramer PJ.  Magnetic Resonance Microscopy of
     Changes  in       Content in       of Transpiring  Plants.   Proc
     Acad  Sci  USA 1987 ;84:2752-5.

8.   Hedlynd  L, Oietz J,        R,  Herfkens R, et  al .   A Ventilator for
     Magnetic           Imaging,   Invest Radio!  1986;21:18-23.

9.   Hedlund  L, Johnson  GA,  Mills GI.  Magnetic           Microscopy of  the
     Rat  Thorax and           Invest  Radio!  1986;21:843-6.

10.  Saunders RD» Smith  H.   Safety          of NMR  Clinical  Imaging.  Br  Med
     Bull  1984;40;i48-54.

11.  Johnston DLS Liu P,  Wisner  GL,       Bi, et  al .   Magnetic
      Imaging;  Present  and  Future  Applications.   Can Med Assoc  J
      1985;132:765-77,

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                                    -64-



                                     Luster
    In a broad       irmunotoxlcology  can  be         as the study of
        (inadvertent)  effects  of envlronnental  chemicals,  therapeutics or
biologicals on the                 The       of effects that nay occur
include                  {i.e.,             or
hypersensltlvlty (allergy)       in       Instances, autolnmunlty.  A large
     of Information has          over the     10 years that          to
certain chemicals or             can                dysfunction and alter
     resistance in              animals following       and sybchronic
exposyre.  Examples of      are listed 1n the  attached table,  The
extensively               of environmental          Is the
aromatic              .(PHAs),  Including polychlorlnated biphenyls,
polybromlnited biphenyls, chlorinated  dlbeniofurans  §nd the           of
this class, chlorinated d1benzo-p-d1ox1ns.

            the         variability                 the toxic
of                          1n laboratory  animals          during
or adylt life with      and, 1n pirtlcylar, dibenzo-p-dloxins
Indicated that the               1s one of the       sensitive          for
toxicity.  These effects are characterized by thymlc         and        and
persistent             of cell-media ted (T. cell)           and
featyres of neonatal              Laboratory               further  Indicated
     the        cell for                   by      1s  the        epithelium
which 1s           for T cell                        only  a United
of reports Indicate        dysfynctlon following                 to PHAs,
the effects                 to be remirtedly similar to       which
in animals.  For example, sypprisslon  of a         hypersertsltiv1 ty
         and           susceptibility  to  respiratory Infections
      1n          who accidentally          polychlorinated
blphenyl/dibinzofyran-continlned rice §11.                  of this
deregulation by PHAs his               1n Michigan      residents
inadvertently          polybromlnated blphenyls.   ThiSi Individuals also
             persistent             of cell-mediated Irani unity with
                   of  null cells,          reflecting the           of
         Gills.   Althoygh long-term                          of
polybrominated  biphenyls re«i1n  to  be  determined in hynans, early  data
Indicate a correlation                alterations and
incidence,

    Thus,  1t              early  laboratory          In
a                        of  the  Iranunological dysfynctlon      is
in         following  Inadvertent  exposyre  to  these compounds.

-------
                                -65-
                     or
                                   11        MB
Class


v





(Mr


Laboratory
*
PCB +
FB0 +
1CT +
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+
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+
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BftP *
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+
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T: :
SQ2
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;;" ' +
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M.S.
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M.S
M.S.
M.S.
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                                    -66-



                                      and      WUcox
BACKGROUND

    Public        scientists       long                      the
                              of               pollution.   One
ind troubling          has                    are         of        on the
earHtst        of pregnancy.   This  can  Include environmentally-
     early abortions/fetal           If                 way to        the
earliest        of pregnancy,                           of             ,
             ,  or drug                be       easily         and
            It is                  151 of  clinically-recognized
end in            loss {spontaneous  abortion).   The  risk of      loss has
           to b6        in      populations  with occupational.
environmental,  etc,,                       clinical        don't  tell the
      story; clinically-recognized                  only a  portion of all
          losses.  There are  at             as      earlier        as
                                   Thus, a           which  could
pregnancy very eirly      define its  ending precisely could  help  pinpoint
        chemical or other environmtntal  exposyres night           Involved
In      ending.   The  application of  new            with      chorlonlc
              offers       possibilities.
METHOD

    Detemination of      early           loss reqyfres sensitive  and
specific         for identifying             The                    of
           to one           of the      subunlt of HCG has vastly
the          of HCG        to        early pregnancy,   HCG 1s          by
the           starting at       the         diy       fertilization.   HCG
1s quickly          in the mother's urine and is            by 1mmunometr1e
         For thH reason, HCG        are the          of studies of early
            Tni3                         1s          to the
                        of the HCG molecyle.  The       is up to one
                   sensitive than any previoysly available         This
      sensitivity has        to be Important         up to
of early           losses             a 1e¥el of HCG secretion      could
                   by
 IMPLICATIONS

    Eifly           loss way be one of the earliest signs of
 to          or        toxins that              reproduction.  It should be
         to streamline  this      of study, collecting yrlnes only on
      early loss  is       likely  to be            This          could be
         to high-risk groups of       1n occupational or other settings
       toxic effects on  reproduction are suspected.               are now
 able  to          HCG in  yrint      to the            levels      occyr in
         non-pregnant                        are just now beginning to be

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                                    -67-

        1n                       for the            of
loss.   This 1s in exciting new applied               in
               Is the               of                     1n
biology.   This may be a       for                 and
and clinical          are           1f we  ire  to                1n
                                 vulnerability  to
exposure.

    Further       and                  is        in this       -- as a high
priority --         of                                        are
                can          the      of  clinical If
                 may Inclydi                  of the                  and
the microelectronics Industry.

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                                    -68-

        8


                                  OF

                                Hoel/Mlchiel


              AND RISK

    Sinct relevant ep1deffl1o1o§1c and clinical  Information are       lacking
on the potential health                    with          to  a  specified
      or chemical, laboratory animal      usually            the
      for      qualitative and                    risk              The
majority of inlmal-based,                       Is qualitative 1n nature.
That 1$, laboratory or              Identification of a
       as a potential                      1s        sufficient, 1n and of
itself, to control or              future          of the         public to
the       or          in question, and no               of the           of
the risk involved In the                      may  be          (*.g.,
regulation of potentially                                   the
                           1t 1s the      of              In  the
qyant1ficat1on of                health risks  that 1s of         scientific
         and

    Art1nal-ba$ed,                                                    two
                or                    be
extrapolation,              by the high      levels typically           1n
laboratory animal         and, of                                      the
ultimate         Is with the risk       to                  the  single
                         1n                        1s the         of the
specific                    or                         to be     1n
determining the          risk or the                     level  for  the
            consideration.  In cardnogenes1sf                      may
                as far ts 1s          or                    further
Insights into the            underlying the carcinogenic
Certainly the      for                  on the meaningfyl  Incorporation  of
molecular and                       risk,        1s well              and  It
offers  in                    opportunity to                  in  the
quantlflcation of potential       risk       on               For
noncarcinogenlc          or                 Is definitely  i       to
           the  "safety factor"          to                     which has
      the                            the mid-501s,      1n      Instances,  to
        the              of quantitative        similar  to            in
ctrci nogenesis.

    Regardless  of the toxicologic          of Interest,  howe¥tr, it 1s
clear that, increasingly,           will be         on        the
       or extrapolation                closely reflect the underlying
biological mechanisms.   For  example,  1n cardnogenesls  the question of
"primary"         "secondary" or  "indirect"        of action and their
                  on the  risk                    1s                  with
       who         the  litter                                 traditional
low-dose extrapolation         (1),   On the                    who out of

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                                    -69-

            or                         on  the                        for
                                 levels for                            may
     to            the  biological             ynderlie its      giving
particyTat           to the           of thresholds*  For          1f one
            a threshold           is              the
i      (biological),"no effect"        or             a      or
level        the                    are minimal"?       It       to the
population as a       or           Individual to  Individual?   (In the
latter          the                         nay  be
one for which no threshold          That 1s, 1f           1 evils vary
indlvidya1s9      the "population"           level                  to the
          for the      stnsittve 1ndi¥ldyi1  tn       population, which, for
all                           be indistinguishable      t
level.!                of         1s              1s a            (is
        to traditional)       for the          of any
to be           an                                   In
          of                           levels (2).

    The          of                       may well           as
scientific        as  the           of the
                          Certainly, the utility  of  the
      for Identifying                       risks 1s broadly
within the scientific           [e.g., see the                (3)
the interpretation of                                 to
carcinogenic risk                    or clinical      are not  available].
               Is no  unlversilly               of
the results          1n                    to                1s usually
is to                     and                                  risk is
          1n       of the                            Yet,
                 e.g.,  on            can     by  as      as  40-fold  (4)
          on              are           in       of  an
daily            or a                   ng                    (divided] by
     weight.  Furthermore,                                 one to rely on
                  a                     as the        for extrapolating risk
                               an          1s only an
           for the variety of              can            to
            In          (e.g.,             In llfespan,       size,
profile^ genetic                                  etc.).               In
the quantitative               of taxied ogle                          will
                         on the use of nolecylar  and                   For
         the use of                  or nolecylar dosinetry,
scientifically feasible, to          the "biologically
could significantly        the
extrapolation of          toxlcologlc
                                      for quantitative risk estimation
     and are Increasingly               to epidemic!ogle      as well  as to
laboratory animal resylts, particularly In the      of cardnogenesls.
     of the                       Inclyde        fitting of the
      to DoTTs              16}, Day and Brown's y$e of the            to
               a        of              risk              as

-------
                                    -70-

         and radiition          early,       or       early  and  late
of the                      17]»      Ill's (6)  use of          and
                     to              the                           of
site-specific                              syrvivors,  and  their  use of
linear, linear-quadratic and                 to predict
risk            with Ionizing radiation.   While  the use of
     obviously elimlnatfs the      for         extrapolation,           nay
not be sufficiently sens1tl¥t to allow  one to
                     or, in      instances,       to           if any
risk         to be                 low  or          levels  of

    A        of            may be          to increase the sensitivity of
the available epidemlologlc        For  Instance, Initial          it
risk Identification and            could  be         on sens1tl¥e
within the         population                   as the     old  or young,
indivldyals with insufficient                  Individuals suffering
concurrent         or Inherited deficiencies, and individuals  also
to             risk factors for the toxlcologlc  endpoint or       effect
of Interest.

    Recently, a new speciality his         In the field of epidemiology,
which  1$                as nolecylir or biochemical epidemiology.  One of
the primary          of molecylar              1s to       laboratory
           for the identification and characterization of
        to epidcmlologlc field studies, so as to clarify  the        of
underlying               relationships, I.e., relationships
         and         or toxicploglc        (8).   Specifically,
        may provide quantitative          of                      (e.g.,
blood      levels}»       specific          (e.g., ONA        formation),
biologic         and early or frank         to  replace the      subjective
and qyalitative                                    1n ep1dem1olog1c
Investigations (e.g.,                      histories
     and      classifying                as       tlther  "exposed" or
"unexposed".)

    While Interest 1n ind and      application  of biochemical          1s
increasing rapidly, validation  of their use for epidemiology  1s  currently  a
major                    and 1t 1s likely to          to  be so in  the
future.  [Among the                    be            In  any validation
exercise      the determination  of marker sensitivity, specificity,
predict!¥ity,       of  nomil or baseline values,     whether     marker  1s
reflecting cyrrcnt or cumulative exposyres,         or                 and
cumulative or noncymulative  biological          (8),]
 POPULATIOM

     The  last       in  the  qyantitatl¥e risk                    1s the
               of the  overall  risk  for the popylatton of          or,
 alternatively,  the           of an                     level for
 population.        of  the  uncertainties  Involved 1n using experimental
 animal  or epidemic!ogle       1n         Identification      particularly, 1n
 dose-response  modeling  and  low-dose  risk estimation
 enumerated.   If a             can  be           for the          of a

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                                    -71-

tnreshold            and  a         factor  approach  Is  elected,       1t  1s
Important to          that  failure to             adequately  for  the
ynknown, underlying threshold can  result  In  a  proportion  of  the
population having their Individual  threshold values  falling        the
estimated                     level  In       Instincts  (2).

    Another significant factor that must  be            1n  developing
population risk           is  the                or  estimation of
levels within the population  yrtder evaluation.   There  art a         of
potential          or yncertalntlis typically  Involved 1n the estimation of
population exposyri levels.   Exposures      vary considerably
Individuals or      for a single  Individual  across time,  so  that  the use of
        exposure levels may  not be very representative of the
histories of Individual population           While use of worst-cast
exposures     providt in            on  the actual  levels  of  exposure
encountered, 1t can also lead to  an overestimate of  the popylatlon's health
risks and certainly           a            of uncertainty
estimates.  The uncertainty  1s                         or worst-cast
         estimates are multiplied by the                    risk  per unit
     to obtain an overall estimate of population risk.  For  example,
though worst-case                   may               the
experience of much or possibly all  of the popylatton  of Interest, "iveragf"
risk per unit      estimates  may  significantly               the risks of
the      susceptible         of     population.

                    the uncertainties  Involved In quantitative  risk
estimation and concern for  the health of  the         popylatlon      often
led to the overuse of worst-case  or upperboynd             1n quantitative
risk est1mat1on--assumpt1ons  that result  1n                  is  undyly
conser¥itive estimates of the popylatlon  risks.  However,       are other
investigators (9) who           national                the            of
      health risks has        to  be         alnostly exclusively on cancer
risk, and      as a result,  other (perhips less quantifiable)       of
human disease or dysfunction may  have  received Insyfficient attention: (See
Appendix),  If this 1s the cise,  then,  1n any specific situation the
estimated "acceptable", "virtually safe"  or "minimal  risk"      for
cardnogenesls may still  entail an unreasonable le«l  of  risk of
        health                     the  estimation         has            on
conservative assytnptlons.

    The OSTP                 (10)  tnd  other science  policy reports
          the      for qualitative and quant1tatl¥e characterization of the
uncertainties of specific risk           (e.g., consideration of the Impact
of model  selection, the use of one set  of laboratory      over  another, the
choice of a particular species as being most representative of  humans,
etc.).  Also Important are considerations and specification of  the
assumptions ynderlylng a particular risk  assessment  (e.g., the  construct of
an estimated lifetime         dally           so      animals continuously
      at  a constant      throyghoyt their lifetimes  might be      to
estimate  the risk in hunans who miy      received Intermittent           at
varying       for only a portion  of their Hfespan).   The continued
attention to/stress on      descriptions of specific uncertainties and
assumptions involved 1n any given risk  assessment and to  their potential
impact on the estimation of risks has           helpful to

-------
                                    -72-
with regulatory responsibilities for      rational and            decisions
      the         fate of the                      consideration.

-------
                                    -73-
REFEREI4CES
3.
4.
5.
8.
 9.
Hoel ,  D.G., Baseman, O.K., Hogin, M.D., Huff, J., and McConnell ,
E.E.  The  Impact of Toxicity on Carcinogenicity Studies:
Implications for Risk Assessment. (Sybmitted for Publication)

Portier, C., and Hogan, M, (1987).  An Evaluation of the Safety
Factor Approach in Risk Assessment.   In: Mclachlan, J.A. ,  Pratt,
R.M. ,  and Markert, C.I. eds,   Banbury Report 26; Developmental
Toxicology: Mechanisms and Risk.   Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory,
New York,

International Agency for Research on Cancer (1985).  Preamble {p,
ZO).   In; Volume 35: Polynuclear Aromatic Compounds, Part 4,
Bitumens, Coal-tars and Derived Products, Shale-oils and Soots,
IARC,  lyon, France.

Office of Technology Assessment 11981),  Assessment of Technology
for Determining Cancer Risks  from the Environment.  Washington,
D.C.;  Government Printing Office.

Doll,  R., and Peto, R. (1978),   Cigarette  Smoking and Bronchial
Carcinoma: Dose and Time Relationships       Regular Smokers and
Life-Long Non-Smokers,  J. Epid, Conro. Health 32: 303-313,

Day, N.E., and Brown, C, C. (1980),  Multistage Models and Primary
Prevention of Cancer.  JNCI 64:  977-989.

National  Academy of Sciences, Committee  on  the Biological Effects
of Ionizing  Radiations (1980).   The  Effects of Populations of
Exposure  to  Low Levels of  Ionizing Radiation;  1980,  Washington,
D. C.:  National Academy Press.

Schulte,  P.A. (1987).  Hethodologic  Issues  in the  Use of Biologic
Markers  in Epidemiologic  Research,   Ant.  J,  Epid.  126;  1006-1016.
 Silbergeld,
 1399.
E.K.  (1987).   Letters:   Risk Assessment,   Science  237
 10,  U.  S,  Interagency  Staff  Group  on  Carcinogens  (1986),   Cl
          nogens:   A Review of the  Science and Its Associted
          inlPt.   FHP fi7 •  ?nU7ft?_
 Circinogens;
 Principles,
                                               1986),   Chemical
 EHP 67: 201-282.

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                                    -74-
                      Of         AND

                           Chernoff  and

    The         of basic           on cancer  and  non-cancer           within
any         orginizitlon  1s                a variety of              as
Congressional           the given organization"s operational policy, public
perceptions and concern,  ongoing Identification  of potential           §nd
to      extent, the       of disciplines              by  the organization's
scientific staff.  All of                   an 1mp°act on  scientific
         in their designing and              a basic                  to
     their organization's       now  and In the future.

     Generally, 1n          legislative authority                  EPA to
evalyiti a             of potential  health effects associated  with
to environmental chemicals ind Insults,  Rartly       legislation
specific health           to be                      irtdpolnts.   It 1s,
therefore, EPA's policy which dlrtcts           to specific            of
        for environmental                   a public Institution, EPA  Is
influenced by the             and concerns of the public and Industrial
                                         of chemicals,   Consequently,  EPA
      Its administratfve and regulatory policy to

    For      years the primary envlroontntal health concern, as
by the public,     the possibility of chemically-Induced cancer.  The
        for  this concern Include the            and         Irreversibllity
of the          Its           for debilitation and          lethality, and
the                     chaiicals to which       is prevalent
         cm              in laboratory animals.  As a  result  of
concerns     the body of      that has                        years,
EPA's (as well as       regulatory           regulatory  policy has  been
largely driven  by        as the htalth endpolnt of greatest severity.

         the                       however, it has        Increasingly
                    art      other         health endpolnts which nay  be
and                   by          to environmental agents.   The methyl
mercury-                 of birth         in Japan, the incidents of
delayed neuropathy in the Middle East, and the occurrence of      sterility
in         occupattonally         to chemicals 1n the USA all
to alert the public      the potential risk of          to
       may require consideration of      health endpolnts.  The          of
this realization has      a broadening of the       of concern and  a
simultaneous            of           to       additional
Along with this                  has      an  increasing          to
consider                         during the  formulation of regulatory
policy.

    Tox1co1og1sts  in       the  public and private              also
identified other               and  susceptible  populations that are at
potential risk  from           to  environmental          These  realizations
     lead  to considerable         for  research  1n                  as

-------
                                    -75-

immunotoxlcology,  herltible           ind             and geriatric
              Additionally,             and  the public
increasingly                 the                 of lifetime          to
relatively               of  §          of
                              to       i                      of the
                                 of           is      as the
     to              risk.

    Finally,       are  two                     of the                and
the scientific                                    of             The
translation of                 Into              risk             1s an
          difficult           While  a                 is desirable, the
regulation md         of                     faulty                 letd
to                     finclydlng
                               a            in the         of life
                                                        of      and
                                 is  the                   Indicates,
                                    now and in the future will be
to            the  scientific      and         of risk             The
            of a                      of  the
for        and non-cancer           1s yltimttely the      rational «ay in
which to foraylate            policy.   This                to i continuing
            for

    The                                         allocations          the
     for simpler,                  and                                 of
testing.  Thi        of        and                 of                   1s
fir in        of     ability to      for                 by
                                by the             the use of
animals in                        i                 to the             of
alternative

    The EPA          efforts 1n                          greatly
     the last        for the         listed
has led to i                               and non-cancer           1s
impossible to      since       art so                factors      go into
the             of this           Ctrtalnly, §          allocation  to
       and                      h«          the        to utilize a
     of health           in  the fenny lit! on of regulatory policy.

    Long-term                Into both        and                      1s
recognized is                 1f the        Is to           a
           policy In the                      possible,
consider        and                                        in the
will          multiple tox1co1og1ci1                the
       of           and se¥er1ty of effects          will be
attention.  Efforts will be      to         ind          lexicological
in a                 fashion.             win       the        of
structure-activity and                 modelling,              design, §nd
                         of         as well  as            endpoints.

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                                    -76-

        6





    This century has      the           of  abnormalities  1n early growth
and development, chronic                        and cancer  as  the major
       of        morbidity and mortality  1n  the  Industrialized  nations of
the world.   Initially,                     often        as       the result
of heredity or the natural             of the aging process.
recently,                 has      a         rtcognttion
frequently      important                          or risk  factors  1n their
etiology.

         of       environmental  risk        are either          directly
by        or subject to their manipulation. They include chemical  and
physical        in the air, water,       supply, drygs,           products,
     and workplace.  While                   of the       of      risk
        are difficult to          or verify, 1t his      ¥arioy$ly
                i significant        of  the two million  Individuals who  die
     year in the United        may       had their lives            to
       by the effects of air pollution;  that pollutants  In  oyr drinking
water         nay play a role 1n the       of         and       disease,
which are the two leading        of       1n this country;  and      the
collectl¥e         of                      and         raiy now  be
            a level of             typically            with
            Therefore.                            and regulators are
Increasingly                  to Identify                     risk  factors
and        §r eliminate their             effects,

    Attention has              on      of the                          cin
be                  one          to        the       Impact  of  environmental
          on       health.  Often, relevant epldwrfologlc and  clinical
Information on the potential health                   with           to  §
specific          or                will not be available.
     is available,          1t may not be sufficiently sensitive or
specific to allow an              to
        that         to              the unknown, underlying relationship
                 and         In                the available            may
not      permit one to           11 any health  risk         to be
           with low or          Itvels of            As  a result,
laboratory anintal      will       constitute the primary basis for both
qualitative  (I.e.,         Identification) and quantitative       risk
estination,

             of  the high  {often maximally tolerated)       typically
         1n  laboratory                           quantitative risk
estimation       on                 Involves two
be              low-dose  extripolatlon and          extrapolation.   In
instances  (e.g., when the       of          Is i carcinogen or mutagen)
mathematical  modeling will  be          to           low-dose risk estimates,
and choice of a particular      nay       a significant  impact on  the
magnitude  of  the            risk.   In             a threshold            may

-------
                                    -77-

be         ind a                             to
         levels.  This               clearly              a        of
                             and

    Ideally, the         of                              be           by
       Into               all  of  the         species-specific
coyld contribute to              differences in           to  the          of
                    the                       to             Is to
            and the             In          mm
                 are      on in                              scale.
Unfortunately,        of the                                            be
justified on biological          and significant  differences can resylt In
the                                         on the                   As
our          on              risk                                to
               and                 1,s                to  the      to
             the uncertainties            with       risk            and
to              uncertainties by  luprovlng the biological           which
the risk                    1s

    In          to                            to  the
        Itself,'Which                  ind on                    §yr
efforts to                     the           risks       by
                             are       I        of
              our          to        the        of environmentally-related
                      are the      of
on the majority of                                                     the
                   the Insufficient and                         training of
our nation's physicians with         to                       and the
           surveillance of populations         or potentially         to


    Priority      be       to          1n a        of                1f we
ire to                        and         oyr               of the role of
en¥i          factors in                             For
               to be       to the             and            of
{particularly non-Invasive             for           low levels  of
         to                              Similarly, we      to         a
                     of the biological
environmentally-related                to              the
           of       health       ind the primary/secondary           of
environmentally-related            A        of          of long-term,
         activities 1n                              or nay
direct application to  the       of                                   EPA
and       regulatory                       on an          basis art       In
this

    Comparison of          of                (I.e., cellular
          during               and                        activation  1n
            and chemically-induced               may         Insight  Into
the            of       formation at  the raoltcylar level,   In addition,
     of the uncertainty invoked 1n                                  of
carcinogenic risk               eientuilly be         by
comparisons of          activation and expression.

-------
                                    -78-

    Recent advances in biochemistry and molecular biolofy have led  to  the
            of highly sensitive            which may       the
quantification of the Internal       of  carcinogens or 1n            the
biologically effective      in        tissues.   This ability  to
external  exposure or adwilnl             levels on a
biologically-relevant basis should e¥cntya11y lead to a clearer
understand!ng of the relationships                  and         or
toxicologic effect for      health         in the       environment.
Recognition of the potential  usefulness of       biochemical         has
led to the           of a new field of epidemiology,       is molecular or
biochemical  epidemiology,      has as one of its major goals  the adaptation
of       laboratory            into eplderafologic field studies.

    In the fields of neyrotoxlcologj and  Immunotoxicology new methodologies
promise to        lexicologists to greatly Improve our ability to
     central         and               deficits.  The utilization of novel
techniques in molecular biology {e.g.,  monoclonal antibodies  to specific
critical  chemical components of       systems) promises to allow .improved
evaluations of potential disfunctions.

    In the      of       reproduction one of the      important questions
involves the potential of environmental        to affect pre-1mplantat1on
loss.   Researchers      recently Identified an antibody to a  sybuntt of the
hormone human chorionic gonadotropin.  This advanct enables the
identification of spontaneous abortions at an earlier       and with
        accyracy      was previously possible and may significantly improve
oyr monitoring capabilities.

    In addition to identifying specific          of long-term
activities that either §re generating or may          results directly
applicible to the environmental health issues that EPA              from a
regulatory viewpoint, this          also          to  describe the
relationship          long-term and short-tern (or Immediate)
"problem-solvlng"  research     to  put  1t  1n perspective.  For example, It
is noted that the  general philosophy undtrlying basic health research  is
that ynderstanding more  about  the  biologic            by which
environmental hazards      as  toxic chemicals Induce         effects will
lead,  ultimately,  to earlier           of       effects,      sensitive
analytical          for  fully characterizing their potential Impact on
health,  and a         understand!ng of  how  to  eliminate  or, at  least,
that impact.  The  dlstlngyishing  characteristic of  this  basic research 1s
that 1t  typically            "generic"  scientific         and  1s  not focused
on a specific         or          concern.   Fyrtherroore, it      usually
be            for a period  of  several               1t           results
may       a  direct  application  to  regulatory       or  problems.

    The  environmental  health         with the toxic       lead  1s      to
illustrate  the  necessity of  and role  for  long-tem  research  activities In
the              of a        scientific foundation           for
constryctive  actions dealing  with public  health           While
toxicity resulting      "h1§h" level            has  long      recognized as
an  important  public health concern,  ongoing,  long-term basic           has
only  recently given us  the ttchnlcal  tools to             of the
 subtle yet extremely           effects of low-level lead exposure.

-------
                                   -79-

                       Is              on a                or
         it nay      to be            for i                     of
       any                   or              cm be                     is
                                new       of the
on the              the                     AT                  1f the
         is         and the                 of        clearly
       any        1s          i                         of      and
may be                 the         Is            Certainly,      1s the
                                     In              ind to a
with

    It       clear,                            of the                {or
                                             EPA         an             If
not                     the                  and 1n            the only
         to                           will be to      on the
and insights             long-ttm            This certainly has      the
           in         with                           to        The
              will        us  to        in                         1s to
        stable, consistent         for      a           With
        and                   EPA can
issyes            It 1s particularly           and
its own           findings and        of              and
institutions to the           of  critical

-------