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An Empirical Approach to Sufficient Similarity: Combining Exposure Data and Mixtures Toxicology Data
Authors:Scott Marshall  Chris Gennings  Linda K. Teuschler  LeAnna G. Stork  Rogelio Tornero‐Velez  Kevin M. Crofton  Glenn E. Rice
Affiliation:1. Biostat Solutions, Inc., , Mt Airy, MD, USA;2. Department of Biostatistics, Virginia Commonwealth University, , Richmond, VA, USA;3. National Center for Environmental Assessment, U.S. EPA, , Cincinnati, OH, USA;4. Monsanto Company, , St. Louis, MO, USA;5. National Exposure Research Lab, U.S. EPA, Research Triangle Park, , NC, USA;6. National Health and Environmental Effects Research Labs, Office of Research and Development, U.S. EPA, Research Triangle Park, , NC, USA
Abstract:When assessing risks posed by environmental chemical mixtures, whole mixture approaches are preferred to component approaches. When toxicological data on whole mixtures as they occur in the environment are not available, Environmental Protection Agency guidance states that toxicity data from a mixture considered “sufficiently similar” to the environmental mixture can serve as a surrogate. We propose a novel method to examine whether mixtures are sufficiently similar, when exposure data and mixture toxicity study data from at least one representative mixture are available. We define sufficient similarity using equivalence testing methodology comparing the distance between benchmark dose estimates for mixtures in both data‐rich and data‐poor cases. We construct a “similar mixtures risk indicator”(SMRI) (analogous to the hazard index) on sufficiently similar mixtures linking exposure data with mixtures toxicology data. The methods are illustrated using pyrethroid mixtures occurrence data collected in child care centers (CCC) and dose‐response data examining acute neurobehavioral effects of pyrethroid mixtures in rats. Our method shows that the mixtures from 90% of the CCCs were sufficiently similar to the dose‐response study mixture. Using exposure estimates for a hypothetical child, the 95th percentile of the (weighted) SMRI for these sufficiently similar mixtures was 0.20 (i.e., where SMRI <1, less concern; >1, more concern).
Keywords:Cumulative risk assessment  hazard index  pyrethroids  sufficient similarity  whole mixtures
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