Integrating “One Health” Concepts in the Design of Sustainable Systems for Environmental Use
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. ESOH Data Considerations
3. ESOH Data Requirements
3.1. Approaches
3.1.1. Phased Approach
3.1.2. Evolving Science and New Tools
3.1.3. Research vs. Testing
3.2. Utility of Flow Charts
3.3. Reproduction and Developmental Effects
3.4. Balancing Human Health, Environmental Toxicity, Persistence, and Fate and Transport
3.5. Mixtures
4. Discussion
4.1. Current and Evolving Regulatory Interests
4.2. Case Studies and Cost Analysis
4.3. Cost and Time Considerations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Property/Attribute | Utility |
---|---|
Molecular mass (MW) | Determine dermal flux, understand excretion rates and pathways |
Water solubility (mg/L) | Environmental fate and transport, exposure potential (e.g., gut absorption potential) |
Fat solubility (octanol/water partition coefficient; log Kow) | Potential for gastrointestinal absorption and bioaccumulation/magnification between trophic levels |
Vapor pressure (atm, torr) | Potential for inhalation exposures; environmental half-life (e.g., Henry’s Law) |
Affinity to organic carbon (log Koc) | Fate and transport; soil sorption, potential to reach ground water from release. |
Henry’s Law coefficient | Environmental half-life in surface water (often calculated) |
Boiling point | Inhalation potential; environmental persistence |
Melting point/ionization potential | Fate and transport |
Data | Standard Test Methods | Cost (USD K) i | Time (Days) |
---|---|---|---|
BA2 | |||
Chemical/Physical Characterization | |||
Material purity | Thermogravimetric analysis, Differential Scanning Calorimetry, Fourier Transform Infrared/Raman spectroscopy, Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Gas Chromatography Mass Spectrometry | USD 25 K | Varies (approximately 30 d) |
pH or pKa | OECD 122, OECD 112 | ||
Vapor pressure | ASTM E1194-07 (withdrawn 2013); OECD 104; ARL-TR-6887, New Micro-Method for Prediction of Vapor Pressure of Energetic Materials, July 2014 | ||
Water solubility | ASTM E1148-02 (withdrawn 2013, no replacement); OECD 105 | ||
Hydrolysis * | ASTM E895, OECD 111, the EPA 712-C-08-012 | ||
Octanol water partition coefficient (Kow) | ASTM E1147 (withdrawn 2013), OECD 123, OPPTS 830.77550 | ||
Affinity to organic carbon (Koc) (calculated) * | OECD 121; Estimate Koc using Mackay function (Koc = 0.41- Kow) | ||
Henry’s Law constant (calculated) * | Calculated (H = (Vp * MW)/S, where Vp = vapor pressure (atm) at 25 C, MW = molecular weight (g/mol), S = solubility in water (mg/L) | ||
Dissolution rate * | ASTM E1624-94 (2008; withdrawn 2013). See ERDC’s method for munition dissolution, Dissolution Kinetics of IMX 101 and IMX-104, ERDC TR OP-F-15-1. | ||
Human Health | |||
Endocrine disruption—in vitro estrogen and steroidogenesis | OECD 455–457 (estrogen); 458 (androgens), 456 (thyroid); see Day et al. 2018. | USD 10 K | 60 |
Mutagenicity, in vitro | |||
Bacterial reverse mutation (Salmonella typhimurium) | OECD 471 | USD 6 K | 35 |
Cytotoxicity, in vitro | |||
Mammalian cell viability assay (e.g., Mammalian Cell Line—Neutral Red Uptake); phototoxicity | OECD 432 | USD 6 K | 25 |
Skin sensitization (in vitro) | OECD 442 C/442 E | USD 10 K | 60 |
Eye irritation/corrosion screen | OECD 496 | 1 K | 20 |
Ecotoxicity | |||
Acute toxicity, bioluminescent bacteria (Aliivibrio fischeri), in vitro | ASTM STP766, in vitro assay | USD 7 K | 20 |
Aquatic bioconcentration factor | * Estimated from experimentally measured KOW (if organic) | NA | 1–7 |
BA3 | |||
Chemical/Physical Characterization | |||
Hydrolysis (rate) * | ASTM 895, OECD 111, EPA 712-C-08-012 | USD 10 K | 60 for all four |
Photolysis (rate) * | ASTM E896, OECD 316, EPA 712-C-08-013 | USD 10 K | |
Persistence * | OECD 301, 310, 302 C, ASTM E1279, OPPTS 835.3180 | USD 10 K | |
Koc (Kd) * | ASTM E1195-01 (Withdrawn 2013, No Replacement), OECD 106 (recommended), OECD 121 | USD 10 K | |
Human Health (specific exposure tests determined by professional judgment) | |||
Acute oral toxicity | ASTM E1163, OECD 401, OECD 420, OECD 423, OECD 425, EPA 712-C-02-189, EPA 712-C-02-190 | USD 13 K | 74 |
Acute inhalation toxicity | OECD 403, OECD 436, EPA 712-C-98-193 | USD 15 K | 90 |
Acute dermal toxicity | OECD 402, EPA 712-C-98-192 | USD 9 K | 30 |
Skin irritation/corrosion | OECD 439, OECD 404, EPA 712-C-98-196 | USD 7 K | 30 |
Skin sensitization (3-pack in vitro) | OECD 442 | USD 16 K | 50 |
Additional in vitro genotoxicity tests (if reverse mutation results are positive): | |||
Genotoxicity, Chinese Hamster Ovary Test, in vitro | ASTM E1262, OECD 473 | USD 21 K | 65 |
Genotoxicity, Mouse Lymphoma Assay, in vitro | ASTM E1280, OECD 490 | USD 21 K | 56 |
Ecotoxicity * | |||
Aquatic toxicity—in vivo | |||
Acute aquatic organism toxicity * | ASTM E729, ASTM E1192, EPA-821-R-02-012 | USD 25 K | 60 |
Chronic aquatic organism toxicity * | EPA-821-R-02-013 | USD 20 | 60 |
Aquatic plant (algae) toxicity * | OECD 201 | USD 8 | 60 |
BA4 | |||
Chemical/Physical Characterization | |||
Biodegradation (rate) * | ASTM E1279 | USD 15 | 30 |
Leaching study * | OPPTS 835.1240 | NA | |
Treatability (select the test most relevant to manufacturing conditions and facility capabilities) | |||
Aerobic sewage treatment * | OECD 303, ASTM E1625 | USD 15 | 30 |
Biodegradation in activated sludge * | OECD 311, ASTM E2170 | USD 17 | 30 |
Biodegradation in wastewater * | OECD 314 | USD 10 | 30 |
Human Health (specific exposure tests determined by professional judgment) | |||
28-day repeated dose, oral | OECD 407, EPA 712-C-00-366 | USD 94 K | 125 |
28- or 14-day repeated dose, inhalation | OECD 412 | USD 180 K | 120 |
Additional genotoxicity tests (if in vitro genotoxicity results are positive): | |||
Genotoxicity, in vivo (mouse micronucleus) | OECD 474 | USD 17 K | 65 |
Genotoxicity, Hepatic COMET Assay, in vivo | OECD 489 | USD 15 K | 65 |
Ecotoxicity * | |||
Bioconcentration and bioaccumulation * | ASTM E1676, OECD 317 | varies | |
Aquatic toxicity (chronic/sub-lethal) in vivo (three species) * | |||
Water flea (Ceriodaphnia dubia) (7 day) * | EPA-1002.2; ASTM E1295; ISO 20665 | USD 50 K (all three) | 30 |
Fathead Minnow (Pimephales promelas) (7 day) * | OECD 229 | ||
Green algae (Pseudokirchneriella subcapitata or Raphidocelis subcapitata) * | OECD 201 | ||
Freshwater Whole Effluent Aquatic Toxicity | EPA-821-R-02-013, EPA 821-B-00-004 | USD 11–19 | 60 |
Terrestrial/soil invertebrate toxicity (chronic) | USD 80–130 K | 90 | |
Earthworm reproduction (Eisenia fetida/Eisenia andrei)—56 day * | ISO 11268-2; OECD 222 | USD 70 | 90 |
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Johnson, M.S.; Adams, V.H. Integrating “One Health” Concepts in the Design of Sustainable Systems for Environmental Use. Toxics 2023, 11, 280. https://doi.org/10.3390/toxics11030280
Johnson MS, Adams VH. Integrating “One Health” Concepts in the Design of Sustainable Systems for Environmental Use. Toxics. 2023; 11(3):280. https://doi.org/10.3390/toxics11030280
Chicago/Turabian StyleJohnson, Mark S., and Valerie H. Adams. 2023. "Integrating “One Health” Concepts in the Design of Sustainable Systems for Environmental Use" Toxics 11, no. 3: 280. https://doi.org/10.3390/toxics11030280
APA StyleJohnson, M. S., & Adams, V. H. (2023). Integrating “One Health” Concepts in the Design of Sustainable Systems for Environmental Use. Toxics, 11(3), 280. https://doi.org/10.3390/toxics11030280