Triclosan concentrations in freshwater systems in the United States - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Triclosan concentrations in freshwater systems in the United States - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Triclosan concentrations in freshwater systems in the United States Angela L. Perez, Ph.D. January 11, 2017 Purpose of our study Characterize TCS in freshwater aquatic systems and untreated and treated source waters supplying municipal
Purpose of our study
Characterize TCS in freshwater aquatic systems and
untreated and treated source waters supplying municipal drinking systems in the US, 1999-2012
Compare measured values to health and aquatic
guidance values
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Objectives
Create database of freshwater TCS concentrations
Literature search 1999-2012
“triclosan”, “triclosan AND water”, and “antimicrobial AND
water”
Peer-reviewed studies, gray literature, municipality reports Raw data and summary statistics
500 papers identified
46 fit data quality objectives 45 states and 1 US territory
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Water Classification
1.
Untreated water
2.
Effluent
3.
Effluent-impacted environmental
4.
Environmental waters
5.
Post-treatment drinking water
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Statistical Analysis
Regression on order statistics (ROS)
Extrapolate values from samples below LOD or censored data
ANOVA on water categories
Dunn’s all-pairwise for significant differences Kaplan Meier to calculate upper confidence limit
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Triclosan Meta-data
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46 studies included; raw data from 44 studies
N=242 N=192 N=228 N=1195 N=453 Untreated Effluent Effluent-Impacted Environmental Environmental Finished 83% 93% 62% 11% % = detection frequency 1%
Triclosan Meta-data
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ng/L Untreated Effluent Effluent- Impacted Environmental Environmental Finished N 237 192 228 1195 453 mean (imputed) 9715 775 130 13 4 maximum* 393000 8000 2300 2830 734 *Based on raw data
Sources of Variability
Lack of information on sampling locations
Challenges classifying water categories (e.g. effluent-impacted
classified as environmental)
Spill events
TCS input: Rural vs. urban, heavy vs. light industry Wastewater treatment processes vary across locations Biological and chemical transformations
Half life between 2 days and 2000 days Stream pH affects solubility/adsorption
Stream flow, seasonal effects
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Risk Characterization - Human Health
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EPA Chronic RfD
EPA chronic RfD = 0.3 mg/kg bw/day = 1.05 x 107 ng/L
(70 kg human and 2 L drinking water per day)
Max TCS concentration in finished water = 734 ng/L
TCS in drinking water does not pose a significant human
health risk
Risk Characterization - Ecological
Algae most sensitive species
15 ng/L Chronic LOEC
(Wilson et al., 2003)
In exceedance:
82% effluent-impacted waters 11% environmental waters
500 ng/L Chronic NOEC
(Orvos et al., 2002)
In exceedance:
5.3% effluent-impacted waters 0.25 % environmental waters
376 ng/L Health Canada PNEC
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Orvos et al. Wilson et al.
Reflections
Strengths
Sample size Geographically comprehensive Careful analysis of each paper
Weaknesses
Categories not well defined (effluent-impacted vs. effluent or
environmental)
Sources of variability not accounted for (e.g. stream sizes)
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Conclusions
In over 2300 samples, TCS is widely detected Low human health risk as a result of triclosan
exposures via drinking water
Effluent-exposed freshwaters may exceed threshold
indicators for ecological health, esp. algae
Contact: angela.perez@cardno.com
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Research Questions
Are TCS concentrations or detections in aquatic
systems decreasing over time?
Does the recent FDA ban on TCS in hand-soap
result in a change in TCS concentrations detected in aquatic systems?
Contact: angela.perez@cardno.com
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