Semivolatile organic compounds – from sources to the environment Part 2: Emerging compounds, endocrine disrupting compounds “EMERGING” COMPOUNDS How do we identify which compounds we should be concerned about? What are those compounds? Where do we find them? What levels are they at in the environment? What about human exposure? Compounds we will discuss • Chlorinated paraffins • Current use pesticides • Synthetic musks • Parabens • Phthalates • Organophosphate flame retardants • Bisphenol A Endocrine disruption and endocrine disrupting compounds (Endokrinní disruptory) • Endocrine system – glands in the body which release hormones – Especially testes, ovaries, pancreas, thyroid • Endocrine disruptor/endocrine disrupting compound – anything that interferes with the functioning of the endocrine/hormone systems in the body Statement from Endocrine Society: “an endocrine-disrupting substance is a compound, either natural or synthetic, which, through environmental or inappropriate developmental exposures, alters the hormonal and homeostatic systems that enable the organism to communicate with and respond to its environment” – Especially related to learning disabilities, cognitive functioning, breast cancer, prostate cancer, thyroid cancer, and problems with reproduction and sexual development “Human and wildlife health depends on the ability to reproduce and develop normally. This is not possible without a healthy endocrine system.” “Human and wildlife populations all over the world are exposed to EDCs.” “Endocrine-related effects have been observed in wildlife populations.” “Many endocrine-related diseases and disorders are on the rise.” “Close to 800 chemicals are known or suspected to be capable of interfering with hormone receptors, hormone synthesis or hormone conversion. However, only a small fraction of chemicals have been investigated in tests capable of identifying overt endocrine effects in intact organisms.” “Significant knowledge gaps exists as to associations between exposures to EDCs and endocrine diseases.” “Disease risk due to EDCs may be significantly underestimated.” Classification Relevant compounds Persistent organic pollutants 1,1,1-Trichloro-2,2-bis(4-chlorophenyl)ethane (DDT ) and derivates, 2,3,7,8-tetrabromodibenzo-p-dioxin, brominated diphenylether (BDE) 209, chlordane, hexachlorobenzene, hexachlorocyclohexanes, mirex, PCBs, PCDDs/PCDFs, short and intermediate chain chlorinated paraffins, toxaphene, trichlorobenzene Pesticides 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid, 3,4-dichloroaniline, acetochlor, alachlor, amitrol, atrazine, bifenthrin, boric acid, carbaryl, chlordimeform, cyhalothrin, deltamethrin, dibromochloropropane, dibromoethane, fenarimol, fenitrothion, kepone (chlordecone), linuron (lorox), loxynil, mancozeb, maneb, metam natrium, methoxychlor, metiram (complex), metribuzin, nitrofen, omethoate, picloram, quinalphos = chinalphos, resmethrin, stannane, terbutryn, thiram, trifluralin, vinclozolin, zineb Pharmaceuticals, growth promoters cyclophosphamide, ketoconazol, mestranol, mestranol Personal care product ingredients 2,6-cis diphenyl hexamethylcyclotetrasiloxane, 2-ethyl-hexyl-4-methoxycinnamate, 3-(4-methylbenzylidene)camphor, 3-benzylidene camphor, cyclotetrasiloxane, ethyl 4-hydroxybenzoate, methyl p-hydroxybenzoate Plasticizers and other additives in materials and goods 2,2'-bis(2-(2,3 epoxypropoxy)phenyl)-propane, 4-nitrotoluene, butylbenzylphthalate (BBP), di-(2-ethylhexyl)phthalate (DEHP), dicyclohexyl phthalate, diethyl phthalate (DEP), di-n-butylphthalate (DBP), dipentylphthalate (DPP), epichlorohydrin (1-chloro-2,3-epoxypropane), methyl tertiary butyl ether, mono 2 ethyl, hexylphthalate, mono-n-butylphthalate, resorcinol, styrene, tert. butylhydroxyanisole Polycyclic aromatic chemicals 3,9-dihydroxybenz(a)anthracene, 3-methylcholanthrene, ,6-cyclopento-1,2-benzanthracene, 7,12-dimethyl-1,2 benz(a)anthracene, benzo[a]pyrene Halogenated phenolic chemicals 1,1-trichloro-2,2-bis(4-hydroxyphenyl)ethane, hydroxy - PCBs, pentachlorophenol Non-halogenated phenolic chemicals 4,4'-biphenol, 4,4'-dihydroxybenzophenon, 4-cyclohexylphenol, 4-nonylphenol and nonylphenol (2 compounds), 4-isooctylphenol, 4-octyl-phenol, 4-phenylphenol 4-tert-octylphenol, benzophenone-2, bisphenol A (BPA), bisphenol B, n-butyl p-hydroxybenzoate, nonylphenolethoxylate, n-propyl p-hydroxybenzoate, octylphenol, p-benzylphenol, phenolphthaleine, resbenzophenone Chemicals containing tin fentin acetate, methoxyetylacrylate tinbutyltin, copolymer, phenol, 2-[[(tributylstannyl)oxy]carbony, stannanes (9 compounds), tetrabutyltin, tributyltincarboxylate, tributyltin compounds, tributyltin hydride, tributyltinnaphthalate, tributyltin oxide = bis(tributyltin) oxide, tributyltinpolyethoxylate, tri-n-propyltin, triphenyltin Other chemicals 1,3-dichloro-2,2-bis(4-methoxy-3-methylphenyl)propane, ethylene thiourea, p-coumaric acid, o,p'-DDA-glycinat = n-(2-chlorophenyl)(4-chlorophenyl), acetylglycin Table 1: Potential endocrine disrupting chemicals of the highest priority (Category 1 in European Commission 2014) classified according to their physicochemical properties and/or their use Chlorinated paraffins • Synthetic compounds • Classified by chain length: C10-C13 Short chain chlorinated paraffins (SCCP) C14-C17 Medium/intermediate chain chlorinated paraffins (MCCP) >C17 Long chain chlorinated paraffins (LCCP) CH3 CH3 Cl Cl Cl Cl Cl Cl Cl CH3 CH3 Cl Cl Cl Cl Cl Cl SCCP MCCP General formula: CxH(2x+2)-yCly Too many individual isomers (e.g., >100000 possible MCCPs) therefore not individually identified, rather grouped by chain length and chlorine content Physicochemical properties of SCCPs Krogseth et al. 2014 Chlorinated paraffins – uses • Wide range of uses: sealants, paints, metalworking fluids, leather treatment chemicals, carbon-less copy paper, as flame retardants or plasticizers/softeners in rubbers, textiles, polyvinylchloride (PVC) or other polymers • Main use in metal-working fluids (SCCPs), plasticizers in PVC (MCCPs) and flame retardants (LCCPs) • Properties: non-flammable, very stable History of use • In use since 1930s, increasing production since 1980s 0 100000 200000 300000 400000 500000 600000 700000 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 Estimated total production (tonnes) Data from Bayen et al. 2006 and Fiedler et al. 2010 Production in USA, Europe Production in China CPs - producers • INEOS Chlor (UK, Germany, Norway, Sweden, Netherlands, France) • Caffaro (Italy) • Química del Cinca (Spain) • Leuna-tenside (Germany) • Novácke Chemické Závody (Slovakia) • Dover Chemicals (USA) • NCP Exports (South Africa) • Orica (Australia) • Tosoh(Japan) • Others in India, China  China now believed to be biggest global producer Toxic? • All chlorinated paraffins bioaccumulate and biomagnify, and are considered “toxic” by a number of environment and health agencies (e.g., SCCP and MCCP “toxic” under Canadian Environmental Protection Act, EU says “need to limit risks of SCCP”) • SCCPs have higher toxicity, higher BAFs/BCFs CPs – Regulatory status • USA: SCCPs banned, MCCPs and LCCPs are under review, but currently in use • Canada: SCCPs are banned, MCCPs are regulated, LCCPs are not regulated • Europe: SCCP use is restricted to very limited mining applications, MCCPs are not considered PBT, but under evaluation, LCCPs are deemed not hazardous • Stockholm Convention: SCCPs are under evaluation – will be discussed at next Stockholm Convention meeting SCCPs in air – 10-100x higher than OCPs, PCBs, PBDEs Ma et al. 2014 Spatial distributions and seasonal variations of atmospheric SCCP concentrations in China (ng m–3). Li et al.; Environ. Sci. Technol. 2012, 46, 11948-11954. From Pozo et al. 2006 China Antarctica SCCPs in soil – 10-1000x higher than OCPs Halse et al. 2015 Levels of CPs in Czech River sediments Petra Přibylová , Jana Klánová , Ivan Holoubek Screening of short- and medium-chain chlorinated paraffins in selected riverine sediments and sludge from the Czech Republic Environmental Pollution, Volume 144, Issue 1, 2006, 248 - 254 Further resources on chlorinated paraffins... Current use pesticides - CUPs • Tricky naming – not all CUPs are in use in all areas • Generally refers to pesticides that were replacements for the OCPs • Should have lower environmental persistence and bioaccumulative potential than OCPs • Often lacking in information on environmental behaviour Global pesticide use Insecticide Herbicide Fungicide 2.5 million tonnes per year (Alavanja, 2009) From FAO Statistical Yearbook, UN 2013 Czech pesticide use >200 active substances in use Compound 2013 use (kg) Total 5510952 1 GLYPHOSATE 935469 2 TEBUCONAZOLE 179055 3 CHLORPYRIFOS 178362 4 PROCHLORAZ 176504 5 METAZACHLOR 169985 6 PENDIMETHALIN 124274 7 PETHOXAMIDE 115125 8 SULPHUR 113832 9 TERBUTHYLAZINE 113124 10 CHLOROTOLURON 107418 10 most used pesticides in CZ Round-up Potential EDC pesticides in use in CZ 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid, 3,4dichloroaniline, acetochlor, alachlor, amitrol, atrazine, bifenthrin, boric acid, carbaryl, chlordimeform, cyhalothrin, deltamethrin, dibromochloropropane, dibromoethane, fenarimol, fenitrothion, kepone (chlordecone), linuron (lorox), loxynil, mancozeb, maneb, metam natrium, methoxychlor, metiram (complex), metribuzin, nitrofen, omethoate, picloram, quinalphos = chinalphos, resmethrin, stannane, terbutryn, thiram, trifluralin, vinclozolin, zineb 2,4-D • Most widely used herbicide • 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid • Kills broad-leaf plants • Used on cereal crops and corn, home use on lawns • 65 tonnes used in Czech Rep. in 2013 • 21000 tonnes used globally • Developed in US during WWII – intended to be a chemical weapon – herbicidal properties discovered in 1944 • One of the ingredients in Agent Orange • Soil half-life ~10 days 2,4-D -- Exposure • IARC – possible carcinogen • Potential endocrine disrupter 2,4-D -- Toxicity • Exposure to agricultural workers • Drift from pesticide application – higher levels in homes in agricultural areas or where 2,4-D is used in gardens From US National Pesticide Information Centre Acetochlor • Used on cereal, corn, oil plants • 101 tonnes used in Czech Rep. in 2013 • No longer authorized in EU as of 2012, with 12 months for phase- out • Soil half-life ~9 days 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160 180 200 4.1.2012 15.2.2012 28.3.2012 9.5.2012 20.6.2012 1.8.2012 12.9.2012 24.10.2012 5.12.2012 16.1.2013 27.2.2013 10.4.2013 22.5.2013 3.7.2013 14.8.2013 25.9.2013 6.11.2013 18.12.2013 Airconc.(pg/m3) Air conc. at Košetice Acetochlor -- Exposure • IARC – probably carcinogen • Mutagenic, carcinogenic effects, reduced fertility in lab studies • Moderately toxic to honeybees • Potential endocrine disrupter Acetochlor -- Toxicity • Exposure to agricultural workers • Drift from pesticide application, e.g, to indoor environments in agricultural areas Chlorpyrifos • 3rd most used pesticide in CZ • Broad-spectrum insecticide – disrupts nervous system function • Used on cereals and oil plants, also golf courses, industrial uses, wood treatment • Used in more than 100 countries • 178 tonnes used in Czech Rep. in 2013 • Under review in Europe. In North America, regulations mostly limit use in buffer zones around areas where children might be exposed and where it could enter water systems Chlorpyrifos – Toxicity and risks Human risks: • US EPA identified risks to workers, risks to drinking water in agricultural areas, risks from indoor use • Developmental effects • Autoimmune effects • Reduced IQ due to prenatal exposure Wildlife risks • Toxicity to bees, high toxicity to crustaceans if enters water system Personal care products (PCPs) • Soap, shampoo, conditioner, deodorant, makeup, perfume, lotions and creams, nail polish, hair dye, etc. • What are the potential concerns in PCPs? – Parabens – Synthetic musks – Phthalate esters – UV filters – Antimicrobial compounds • High potential for human exposure • Entry to environment through wastewater treatment Review of personal care products in surface water Brausch and Rand, 2011 Fragrance compounds Kabar pižmový – musk deer Historically, many fragrance compounds were extracted from musk glands of male musk deer. “In order to get access to the natural musk, the animal must be killed to remove the gland, also called musk pod. The fully developed pods (50–70 g) contain about 40% musk. Upon drying, the reddish-brown paste turns into a black, granular material (musk grain) which is used for alcoholic solutions. The aroma of the tincture, which is described for example as animal-like, earthy, and woody, becomes more intensive during storage.” • Natural musk first used in ancient China • Brought to Europe by Crusaders • Musk deer species now endangered • Trade of musk from many Asian countries banned since 1979 by Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora • EU banned musk trade with Russia and China in 1998 • Natural musk very expensive – in 1998, 1 g of musk cost 30-50 US$ (more than gold) Synthetic musks • Attempts to synthesize musks since 1759 • 1906 – nitro musks (Musk ketone, musk xylene) • 1950s – polycyclic musks – low cost and good smell • 1980s, 1990s – concerns about bioaccumulation and carcinogenic potential of nitro musks – shift towards polycyclic musks • 2000s – 70% of use was polycyclic musks, 12% nitro musks Polycyclic musks Traseolide ATII O Phantolide AHDI O Celestolide ADBI O O Tonalide AHTN O Galaxolide HHCB Musks in consumer products linked to musk exposure Nakata et al. 2015 Releases of musks from cities to North American lakes Melymuk et al. 2014 • Major musk pathway is from WWTP • Loadings >10x higher than for PCBs or PBDEs Musks in the urban area • Distributions correspond with population density Musks are not very persistent ~6 h atmospheric half-life Synthetic musks – risk evaluation • UK, EU, USA  risk assessments for HHCB found no further regulation needed • Concerns regarding human exposure via PCP use • Environmental exposure via wastewater releases and application of sewage sludge to agricultural fields Persistence vs. pseudo-persistence Parabens • Used as preservatives in personal care products • Synthetically produced • Most common are: OO OH Benzylparaben OO OH Ethylparaben OO OH Isopropylparaben OO OH Butylparaben OO OH Methylparaben OO OH Propylparaben Paraben use • Found in over 22000 personal care products • Also used as food preservatives (jams, baked goods, syrups) • Added at concentrations up to 0.8% as a mixture • Legal limit for products in EU is 0.4% of an individual paraben • Typical daily use of parabens is 17.76 g/day for adults, 0.378 g/day for babies • Dominant exposure through skin and diet • Skin penetration is inversely proportional to molecule size (e.g., penetration of methylparaben > butylparaben) Parabens – evidence of effect? Let’s look at what the European Commission evaluated... From European Commission Health and Consumer Protection Directorate, “Opinion on Parabens”, 2006 Conclusion: Precautionary principle The precautionary principle states that if an action or policy has a suspected risk of causing harm to the public or to the environment, in the absence of scientific consensus that the action or policy is not harmful, the burden of proof that it is not harmful falls on those taking an action. Paraben exposure House dust (Ma et al. 2014) • Mean: 1.52±0.52 μg/g • Range: 0.03-125 μg/g In food (USA study): (Liao et al. 2013) For comparison, BDE-47 dietary exposure estimated 1-3 ng/kg bw/day (Fromme et al. 2009) Parabens in urine (Koch et al. 2014) Order of magnitude differences between people – related to personal behaviours Phthalate esters • One of the most broadly uses classes of synthetic compounds • 1-2 million tonnes per year • Plasticizers – increase material flexibility and transparency • Up to 60% by weight of material • Wide range of uses: vinyl building and construction materials (e.g: flooring, wall coverings, piping), adhesives, sealants, printing inks, paints, personal care products, and medical applications (eg: blood storage bags) Chaudhuri et al. in prep • More than 25 commercial phthalates in use • Most common phthalates are DEHP, DNIP, and BBP Diethylhexyl phthalate - DEHP 54% of phthalate market in 2010 O O O O Diisononyl phthalate - DINP Benzylbutylphthalate – BBP Phthalates in house dust Compound Average Min Max DEP 0.4 0.02 6.8 DIBP 2.5 0.2 41.9 DNBP 6.8 0.5 104.0 BzBP 47.0 0.2 1957.2 DEHP 138.9 3.1 1515.2 DNIP 197.7 7.1 1521.2 SUM(phthalate) 393.4 14.5 3574.1 Chaudhuri et al. in prep 93 house dust samples from 2010/2011 Concentrations in μg/g Phthalates 14-3574 μg/g PBDEs 0.01-520 μg/g Phthalates exposure Health effects of phthalates • Reproductive effects, especially in men • Associated with diabetes in women (JamesTodd et al., Environmental health perspectives, 2012) • Occurrence of asthma and allergies in children (Jaakkola and Knight, Environmental health perspectives, 2010) • Autism spectrum disorders (Kalkbrenner et al. Current Problems in Pediatric and Adolescent Health Care, 2014) Current regulatory status EU REACH Legislation DHP – reproductive toxin DEHP – serious effects on environment DEHP, DBP, BBP, DIBP – serious effects on human health DEHP, DBP, BBP – should be banned in EU as of 1 month ago (February 2015)... But... “This ban will only cover these substances when they are: - Supplied on their own; - Supplied in a mixture; - Incorporated into an article with the European Union. Imported articles containing any of these substances that were incorporated outside the EU are not covered by the Authorisation process.” Plastic additives • Flame retardants – PBDEs – Novel brominated and chlorinated FRs – Organophosphate FRs • Plasticizers – Phthalates – other • Phenols Organophosphate flame retardants • 1950s-1970s – “chlorinated tris” – TDCIPP – used as flame retardant in children’s pyjamas – banned after metabolites found to be mutagenic and metabolites identified in children’s urine O P O OO Cl Cl Cl Cl Cl Cl Increasing use as market moves away from PBDEs and other BFRs in response to regulatory action and public concern. Dodson et al. 2012 O P O O O TPHP Molecular Formula: C18H15O4P MW: 326.28 O P O OO CH3 BDPP Molecular Formula: C16H19O4P MW: 306.29 O P O OO CH3 CDP Molecular Formula: C19H17O4P MW: 340.31 O P O O O CH3 CH3 DBPP Molecular Formula: C14H23O4P MW: 286.30 O P O OO CH3 CH3 EHDPP Molecular Formula: C20H27O4P MW: 362.40 O O P O O OO O CH3 CH3 CH3 TBOEP Molecular Formula: C18H39O7P MW: 398.47 O P O O O CH3 CH3 CH3 CH3 CH3 CH3 CH3 CH3 CH3 TBPP Molecular Formula: C30H39O4P MW: 494.60 O P O O O Cl Cl Cl TCEP Molecular Formula: C6H12Cl3O4P MW: 285.49 O P O OO CH3 Cl CH3 Cl CH3 Cl TCIPP Molecular Formula: C9H18Cl3O4P MW: 327.57 O P O OO Br Br Br Br Br Br TDBPP Molecular Formula: C9H15Br6O4P MW: 697.61 O P O OO Cl Cl Cl Cl Cl Cl TDCIPP Molecular Formula: C9H15Cl6O4P MW: 430.90 O P O O O CH3 CH3 CH3 CH3 CH3 CH3 TDMPP Molecular Formula: C24H27O4P MW: 410.44 O P O OO CH3 CH3 CH3 CH3 CH3 CH3 TEHP Molecular Formula: C24H51O4P MW: 434.63 O P O OO CH3CH3 CH3 CH3 CH3 CH3 TIBP Molecular Formula: C12H27O4P MW: 266.31 CH3 O P OCH3 O O CH3 TNBP Molecular Formula: C12H27O4P MW: 266.31 Current OPFRs • 4 classes: (1) alkyl phosphate esters – e.g. TBOEP (2) aromatic phosphate esters – e.g. TPHP (3) chloroalkyl phosphate esters – e.g. TCIPP (4) bromoalkyl phosphate esters – e.g. TDBPP O O P O O OO O CH3 CH3 CH3 TBOEP Molecular Formula: C18H39O7P MW: 398.47 O P O OO CH3 Cl CH3 Cl CH3 Cl TCIPP Molecular Formula: C9H18Cl3O4P MW: 327.57 O P O OO Br Br Br Br Br Br TDBPP Molecular Formula: C9H15Br6O4P MW: 697.61 O P O O O TPHP Molecular Formula: C18H15O4P MW: 326.28 Plasticizers Flame retardants OPFRs in consumer products Stapleton et al. Environmental Science and Technology, 2009 OPFRs – evidence of health concerns • Carcinogenic or potentially carcinogenic: TDCIPP, TCEP, TCIPP • Reproductive toxin: DCP, TCP, TCEP • Neurotoxic effects: TPP • Aquatic toxicity: DCP ** most compounds/scenarios have insufficient evidence to evaluate ** (van den Veen and de Boer, 2012) Case Study: OPFRs at RECETOX 0 500 1000 1500 2000 2500 Conc.(ng/m2) TpTBPP TDBPP TDMPP TIPPP TpTP TmTP ToTP TEHP CDP TBEP 2EHDPP TPhP TDCPP BDPP DBPP TCPP TCEP TnBP TiBP 0 200 400 600 800 1000 1200 1400 1600 1800 2000 Conc.(ng/m2) RCX 1 RCX 2 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 Conc.(ng/m2) 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 Conc.(ng/m2) BDE 209 BDE 183 BDE 153 BDE 154 BDE 85 BDE 99 BDE 100 BDE 66 BDE 47 BDE 28 OPFRs PBDEs More info on OPFRs Bisphenol A • Used in polycarbonate plastic: transparent, durable, shatter-proof, light-weight • Coating on tinned food cans • Thermal paper (e.g., store receipts) Bisphenol A in the news BPA use • Most recent global production estimate is from 2003: 2 million tonnes/year • As of 2013, US and European regulators state that BPA is safe at the low levels that occur in foods • Europe and Canada – banned in baby products, but regulators explicitly say this was based on precaution, not scientific evidence • Widespread use and widespread exposure – detectable levels of BPA in 93% of Americans older than 6 years old vom Saal and Hughes, 2012; NHANES, US Center for Diseaes Control; Royal Society of Chemistry, UK BPA – the concerns Evidence of BPA as: - Estrogen mimicking compound -Ovarian toxicant - Associated with adverse birth outcomes, sexual dysfunction, poor development of uterus - May be testicular toxicant - CONCLUSION: “we conclude that BPA is a reproductive toxicant” BPA replacements?? • Other phenols? The Centre for Food Safety, which conducted a literature review on the EDCs in food, has chosen OCPs, PCDDs, PCBs, BPA, styrene, phthalates, organotins, and nonylphenol as the chemicals with the highest relevance to the human health compared to other potential EDCs because they are either persistent in the environment or high in production volume globally (Centre for Food Safety 2012). Dioxins and dioxin-like PCBs (from food and dust), propyl and butyl-parabens (from cream/sunscreen), UV-filters (from sunscreen), triclosan (from deodorant and toothpaste), nonylphenol (clothes) and phthalates (consumer products and dust) were identified as the main contributors to the potential endocrine effects of Danish pregnant women (Danish EPA 2012). Identify the exposure route that causes the highest exposure Identify the most relevant target group of protection (infants, toddlers, children,pregnant women, elderly people) Are exposure pathways well known? no noDoes the compound metabolise? Is there a stable metabolite? Monitor the metabolite in human tissue Does the metabolite bioaccumulate? yes yes yes Monitor the metabolite in human body fluids no Does the compound bioaccumulate? Monitor the parent compound in human tissue Monitor the parent compound in human body fluids no Monitor internal EDC exposureMonitor external EDC exposure yes noyes Monitoring of internal exposure is precluded no yes Food consumption Monitor the compound in food basket Dermal exposure Inhalation Dust ingestion Drinking water consumption Monitor the compound in drinking water Is indoor exposure more relevant than outdoor? Monitor the compound in indoor air Monitor the compound in ambient air Monitor the compound in consumer products Monitor the compound in dust From RECETOX report to WHO on EDCs Take-home messages • Lots of complexity in new compounds • Prioritization is challenging • Persistence vs. pseudo-persistence • Exposure routes are different from legacy compounds – more exposure from “daily life” rather than industrial sources • Understanding the phys-chem properties can help estimate exposure and environmental distributions • More measurement data for these compounds is needed Little things matter https://youtu.be/E6KoMAbz1Bw