Carcinogenic Risk Assessment
- 18 November 1977
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 198 (4318), 693-699
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.910152
Abstract
Carcinogenic risk assessment involves a mixture of statistical, scientific, and public policy considerations. Concepts in current use, such as "no observed effect levels" and "virtual safety," and the problems in implementing them by means of dose-response models, particularly the probit-log dose and linear models are reviewed. The upper limits to risk provided by some conservative procedures are inconsistent with coherent balancing of risks and benefits. A common basis to the dose-response curves describing both carcinogenic and noncarcinogenic effects is to be found in deactivating reactions. A simplified model in which a toxic substance is activated and deactivated in separate and simultaneous reactions is presented and the dose response curve implied by the model is deduced. This curve has the general form of a hockey stick, with the striking part flat or nearly flat until the dose administered saturates the deactivation system, after which the probability of a response rises rapidly. Such a curve describes the Bryan-Shimkin methylcholanthrene-tumor incidence dose response curve as well as the probit log-dose model. The concept of a saturation dose is relevant to risk assessments for carcinogenic and noncarcinogenic substances alike.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- A collaborative cytogenetics study to measure and minimize interlaboratory variationMutation Research, 1977
- Low-Level Radiation: Predicting the EffectsScience, 1977
- A Biometrics Invited Paper. Estimation of "Safe Doses" in Carcinogenic ExperimentsBiometrics, 1977
- A SIMPLE METHOD FOR DETECTING ENVIRONMENTAL CARCINOGENS AS MUTAGENS*Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1976
- Combination Effects in Chemical Carcinogenesis (Experimental Results)Oncology, 1976
- Micronuclei in mouse bone-marrow cells. A simple in vivo model for the evaluation of drug-induced chromosomal aberrationsMutation Research, 1974
- Food and Drug Administration Advisory Committee on Protocols for Safety Evaluation: Panel on carcinogenesis report on cancer testing in the safety evaluation of food additives and pesticides: August, 1970Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology, 1971
- Much ado about safetyFood and Cosmetics Toxicology, 1969
- A Dose-Response Equation for the Invasion of Micro-OrganismsBiometrics, 1953