It is time to develop ecological thresholds of toxicological concern to assist environmental hazard assessment

The threshold of toxicological concern (TTC) concept is well established for assessing human safety of food-contact substances and has been reapplied for a variety of endpoints, including carcinogenicity, teratogenicity, and reproductive toxicity. The TTC establishes an exposure level for chemicals below which no appreciable risk to human health or the environment is expected, based on a de minimis value for toxicity identified for many chemicals. Threshold of toxicological concern approaches have benefits for screening-level risk assessments, including the potential for rapid decision-making, fully utilizing existing knowledge, reasonable conservativeness for chemicals used in lower volumes (low production volume chemicals (e.g., < 1 t/yr), and reduction or elimination of unnecessary animal tests. Higher production volume chemicals (>1 t/yr) would in principle always require specific information because of the presumed higher exposure potential. The TTC approach has found particular favor in the assessment of chemicals used in cosmetics and personal care products, as well as other chemicals traditionally used in low volumes. Use of the TTC in environmental safety is just beginning, and initial attempts are being published. Key questions focus on hazard extrapolation of diverse taxa across trophic levels, importance of mode of action, and whether safe concentrations for ecosystems estimated from acute or chronic toxicity data are equally useful and in what contexts. The present study provides an overview of the theoretical basis for developing an ecological (eco)-TTC, with an initial exploration of chemical assessment and boundary conditions for use. An international collaboration under the International Life Sciences Institute Health and Environmental Sciences Institute has been established to address challenges related to developing and applying useful eco-TTC concepts.

[1]  Watze de Wolf,et al.  Mode of action and aquatic exposure thresholds of no concern , 2005, Environmental toxicology and chemistry.

[2]  J. Hermens,et al.  Classifying environmental pollutants. 2: Separation of class 1 (baseline toxicity) and class 2 (‘polar narcosis’) type compounds based on chemical descriptors , 1996 .

[3]  D. Keller,et al.  Feasibility study: refinement of the TTC concept by additional rules based on in silico and experimental data , 2014, Archives of Toxicology.

[4]  C. Russom,et al.  Predicting modes of toxic action from chemical structure: Acute toxicity in the fathead minnow (Pimephales promelas) , 1997 .

[5]  M Zeeman,et al.  Environmental Risk Assessment of New Chemicals Under the Toxic Substances Control Act TSCA Section Five , 1993 .

[6]  M. Huijbregts,et al.  Sensitivity of species to chemicals: dose-response characteristics for various test types (LC(50), LR(50) and LD(50)) and modes of action. , 2013, Ecotoxicology and environmental safety.

[7]  J. Hermens,et al.  Classifying environmental pollutants , 1992 .

[8]  G. Hodges,et al.  Ecotoxicological thresholds—practical application to an industrial inventory , 2015, Environmental toxicology and chemistry.

[9]  Melanie Gross,et al.  Thresholds of toxicological concern for endocrine active substances in the aquatic environment , 2010, Integrated environmental assessment and management.

[10]  C J van Leeuwen,et al.  Use of the Threshold of Toxicological Concern (TTC) approach for deriving target values for drinking water contaminants. , 2013, Water research.

[11]  Bryan W Brooks,et al.  Application of chemical toxicity distributions to ecotoxicology data requirements under REACH , 2011, Environmental toxicology and chemistry.

[12]  D. Zwart,et al.  Extrapolation Practice for Ecotoxicological Effect Characterization of Chemicals , 2008 .