Abstract

A tentative reference concentration (RfC) for methanol in ambient air, i.e. an exposure concentration below which adverse effects are not expected to occur, was derived from the analysis of the toxicological data available in the literature. Well-documented studies that correlate environmental levels of methanol with observed toxic effects have not been found in the literature, nor have any long-term epidemiological studies of chronic low-level occupational exposure been found. Assessment of RfC for acute inhalation exposure is based on a human study ( n=26 subjects) with a ‘tentative’ NOAEL of 262 mg/m 3. The calculated RfC for 1 h exposure is 104.8 mg/m 3. The RfC is given a low confidence rating as there was only one methanol concentration used. A well designed study on monkeys served as the basis for the assessment of RfC for chronic inhalation exposure. In this study, 13.1 and 131 mg/m 3 were considered as NOAEL and LOAEL, respectively. The calculated RfC is 0.38 mg/m 3. The overall database is weak, lacking data on reproductive and developmental endpoints in human or non-human primates. Nevertheless, the RfC is given a medium confidence rating because of the strength of the principal study.

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