Predictive Environmental
Risk Assessment of Chemical
Mixtures: A Conceptual Framework
- Publication date
- Publisher
Abstract
Environmental risks of chemicals are still often assessed
substance-by-substance,
neglecting mixture effects. This may result in risk underestimations,
as the typical exposure is toward multicomponent chemical “cocktails”.
We use the two well established mixture toxicity concepts (Concentration
Addition (CA) and Independent Action (IA)) for providing a tiered
outline for environmental hazard and risk assessments of mixtures,
focusing on general industrial chemicals and assuming that the “base
set” of data (EC50s for algae, crustaceans, fish) is available.
As mixture toxicities higher than predicted by CA are rare findings,
we suggest applying CA as a precautious first tier, irrespective of
the modes/mechanisms of action of the mixture components. In particular,
we prove that summing up PEC/PNEC ratios might serve as a justifiable
CA-approximation, in order to estimate in a first tier assessment
whether there is a potential risk for an exposed ecosystem if only
base-set data are available. This makes optimum use of existing single
substance assessments as more demanding mixture investigations are
requested only if there are first indications of an environmental
risk. Finally we suggest to call for mode-of-action driven analyses
only if error estimations indicate the possibility for substantial
differences between CA- and IA-based assessments