Abstract

The Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR) lists cadmium as one of its priority hazardous substances. The agency conducted a comprehensive literature review of cadmium and used the information to develop a toxicological profile that identified the full range of health effects associated with exposure to cadmium. It included an assessment that identified screening levels, termed health guidance values or minimal risk levels (MRLs), below which adverse health effects are not expected. In this paper, we describe how MRLs for cadmium are derived. For the acute inhalation MRL, the traditional no observed adverse effect level or lowest observed adverse effect level (NOAEL/LOAEL) approach is used; for the oral intermediate MRL, the benchmark dose (BMD) approach is used. MRLs were developed for the most sensitive route-specific end points, other than mortality and cancer that were sufficiently supported and justified by the data. These included an acute duration (1-14 day exposure) inhalation MRL of 0.03 µg Cd/m3 for alveolar histiocytic infiltration and focal inflammation in alveolar septa and an intermediate duration (15-365 day exposure) oral MRL of 0.5 µg Cd/kg/day for decreased bone mineral density.

Highlights

  • Toxicological profiles are used to help protect people’s health

  • We describe how minimum risk levels (MRLs) for cadmium are derived

  • We describe how minimal risk levels (MRLs) for cadmium are derived

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Toxicological profiles are used to help protect people’s health. They identify potential adverse health effects caused by exposure to chemicals, priority environmental pollutants. The Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR) develops toxicological profiles by examining, summarizing, and interpreting available toxicological information and epidemiologic evaluations of hazardous substances, such as cadmium. To identify potential harmful effects, dose response curves are constructed to identify the lower bound “no observed adverse effect level” (NOAEL) and the upper bound “lowest observed adverse effect level” (LOAEL) of the chemical of interest. We describe how minimum risk levels (MRLs) for cadmium are derived. For the acute inhalation MRL, the traditional NOAEL/LOAEL approach is used; for the oral intermediate MRL, the more recent benchmark dose (BMD) approach is used

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

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