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Identifying Organic Chemicals Not Subject to Bioaccumulation in Air-Breathing Organisms Using Predicted Partitioning and Biotransformation Properties.

Frank WaniaYing Duan LeiSivani BaskaranAlessandro Sangion
Published in: Integrated environmental assessment and management (2021)
Because the respiration processes contributing to the elimination of organic chemicals deviate between air- and water-breathing organisms, existing and widely used procedures for identifying chemicals not subject to bioaccumulation in aquatic organisms based on the octanol-water partition ratio K OW need to be complemented with similar procedures for organisms respiring air. Here we propose such a procedure which relies on the comparison of a compound's predicted KOW , octanol-air partition ratio KOA and biotransformation half-lifeHLB with three threshold values, below which elimination is judged to be sufficiently rapid to prevent bioaccumulation. The method allows for the consideration of the effect of dissociation on the efficiency of urinary and respiratory elimination. Explicit application of different types of the prediction error, such as the 95 percent prediction interval or the standard error, allows for variable tolerance for false negative decisions, i.e., the potential to judge a chemical as not bioaccumulative even though it is. A test with a set of more than 1000 diverse organic chemicals confirms the applicability of the prediction methods for a wide range of compounds and the procedure's ability to categorise approximately four fifth of compounds as being of no bioaccumulation concern, suggesting its usefulness to screen large numbers of commercial chemicals to identify those worthy of further scrutiny. The test also demonstrates that a screening based solely on KOW and KOA would be far less effective, because the fraction of chemicals that can be judged as sufficiently volatile and/or sufficiently water soluble for rapid respiratory and urinary elimination based on the partitioning properties predicted for their neutral form is relatively small. Future improvements of the proposed procedure depend largely on the development of prediction methods for the biotransformation kinetics in air-breathing organisms and for the potential for renal reabsorption. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
Keyphrases
  • water soluble
  • human health
  • heavy metals
  • gram negative
  • risk assessment
  • health risk assessment
  • health risk
  • minimally invasive
  • multidrug resistant
  • high throughput
  • respiratory tract
  • clinical evaluation