Abstract

The permeability coefficient (Kp) is often used for prediction of the dermal penetration of chemicals. Mathematical models have mostly been derived on Kp data basis. However, confusing Kp values are reported, questioning the general reliability of this parameter. In this study, we tested the plausibility of Kp values expressing the dermal penetration velocity (cm h-1) of chemicals on a larger dataset from literature. Kp was applied for the calculation of the time for penetration through skin membranes of defined thickness (tCrossSkin). Kp values were obtained from Flynn's dataset (1990), containing data determined mostly under similar experimental conditions using diffusion cells. Further skin penetration parameters, e.g., times at which the chemicals were firstly measured in the receptor phase, lag times, steady-state times, and exposure duration, where available, were related to Kp values. The data congruence was tested comparing Kp values from Flynn's dataset with those reported in the EDETOX database. Variables, which could bias the results, such as different experimental protocols and research groups were also considered. Kp data for 94 chemicals matched the inclusion criteria were evaluated. According to the Kp values, 21 (22%) compounds would require longer than 100h, and 20 (21%) further compounds longer than 10h of exposure to penetrate skin membranes of ~ 0.01-2.5mm thickness. Obviously, erroneous Kp were found in studies of almost all research groups in Flynn's database, indicating that neither the observer nor the experimental conditions alone biased the values. Our evaluation demonstrates high implausibility of Kp values to represent the dermal penetration velocity and supports general invalidity of the parameter for implementation in studies using skin membranes. The Kp should not be used to characterize the percutaneous penetration of chemicals or in risk assessment without verification.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call