Cargando…

Approaches to the formulation of standards for carcinogenic substances in the environment.

After having agreed that standards are necessary for carcinogens that cannot be completely eliminated from the environment, two exchange groups in the U.S.S.R.-U.S. Cooperative present their different approaches to the problem. The Russian groups has recommended a benzypyrene standard of 0.1 microgr...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Yanysheva, N Y, Antomonov, Y G, Albert, R E, Altshuler, B, Friedman, L
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 1979
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1637722/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/446461
_version_ 1782130898354831360
author Yanysheva, N Y
Antomonov, Y G
Albert, R E
Altshuler, B
Friedman, L
author_facet Yanysheva, N Y
Antomonov, Y G
Albert, R E
Altshuler, B
Friedman, L
author_sort Yanysheva, N Y
collection PubMed
description After having agreed that standards are necessary for carcinogens that cannot be completely eliminated from the environment, two exchange groups in the U.S.S.R.-U.S. Cooperative present their different approaches to the problem. The Russian groups has recommended a benzypyrene standard of 0.1 microgram/100m3 of atmospheric air over populated regions and gives its experimental basis and theoretical rationale in the first part of this joint paper. Lifetime experiments in adult rats over a wide range of dose levels permit the determination of a largest ineffective dose level with respect the theoretical time of first tumor as well as incidence. The standard is set by extrapolation based on body weight and uses a safety factor of 10 to account for the additional susceptibility in embryogenesis and childhood. The U. S. group presents a mathematical model of time-to-tumor occurrence which permits the prediction of population incidence and life span shortening from time-to-tumor data in animals or man. It assumes the distribution of mortality-corrected time to tumor is lognormal with the nth power of time inversely proportional to dose and with dose independence of the variability of the logarithm of time to tumor. The prediction is made by combining this distribution, fitted to the data, with population mortality tables. Both groups emphasize that substantial research efforts are necessary to improve the scientific basis for setting standards.
format Text
id pubmed-1637722
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 1979
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-16377222006-11-17 Approaches to the formulation of standards for carcinogenic substances in the environment. Yanysheva, N Y Antomonov, Y G Albert, R E Altshuler, B Friedman, L Environ Health Perspect Research Article After having agreed that standards are necessary for carcinogens that cannot be completely eliminated from the environment, two exchange groups in the U.S.S.R.-U.S. Cooperative present their different approaches to the problem. The Russian groups has recommended a benzypyrene standard of 0.1 microgram/100m3 of atmospheric air over populated regions and gives its experimental basis and theoretical rationale in the first part of this joint paper. Lifetime experiments in adult rats over a wide range of dose levels permit the determination of a largest ineffective dose level with respect the theoretical time of first tumor as well as incidence. The standard is set by extrapolation based on body weight and uses a safety factor of 10 to account for the additional susceptibility in embryogenesis and childhood. The U. S. group presents a mathematical model of time-to-tumor occurrence which permits the prediction of population incidence and life span shortening from time-to-tumor data in animals or man. It assumes the distribution of mortality-corrected time to tumor is lognormal with the nth power of time inversely proportional to dose and with dose independence of the variability of the logarithm of time to tumor. The prediction is made by combining this distribution, fitted to the data, with population mortality tables. Both groups emphasize that substantial research efforts are necessary to improve the scientific basis for setting standards. 1979-06 /pmc/articles/PMC1637722/ /pubmed/446461 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Yanysheva, N Y
Antomonov, Y G
Albert, R E
Altshuler, B
Friedman, L
Approaches to the formulation of standards for carcinogenic substances in the environment.
title Approaches to the formulation of standards for carcinogenic substances in the environment.
title_full Approaches to the formulation of standards for carcinogenic substances in the environment.
title_fullStr Approaches to the formulation of standards for carcinogenic substances in the environment.
title_full_unstemmed Approaches to the formulation of standards for carcinogenic substances in the environment.
title_short Approaches to the formulation of standards for carcinogenic substances in the environment.
title_sort approaches to the formulation of standards for carcinogenic substances in the environment.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1637722/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/446461
work_keys_str_mv AT yanyshevany approachestotheformulationofstandardsforcarcinogenicsubstancesintheenvironment
AT antomonovyg approachestotheformulationofstandardsforcarcinogenicsubstancesintheenvironment
AT albertre approachestotheformulationofstandardsforcarcinogenicsubstancesintheenvironment
AT altshulerb approachestotheformulationofstandardsforcarcinogenicsubstancesintheenvironment
AT friedmanl approachestotheformulationofstandardsforcarcinogenicsubstancesintheenvironment