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Human exposure risk of organic UV filters: A comprehensive analysis based on primary exposure pathways

Fan Yang, Tao Yuan, Junjie Ao, Li Gao, Zhemin Shen, Jinyang Zhou, Beili Wang, Xiaolei Pan

2024Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The exposure of organic UV filters has been increasingly confirmed to induce adverse effects on humans. However, the critical exposure pathway and the vulnerable population of organic UV filters are not clearly identified. This paper attempts to evaluate the health risk of commonly used organic UV filters from various exposure routes based on comprehensive analysis strategy. The estimated daily intakes (EDI) and hazard quotient (HQ) values of organic UV filters through four pathways (dermal exposure, indoor dust, indoor air, and drinking water) for various age groups were determined. Although the total HQ values (0.01-0.4) from comprehensive exposure of organic UV filters were below risk threshold (1.0), infants were identified as the most vulnerable population, with EDI (75.71 ng/kg-bw/day) of 2-3 times higher than that of adults. Additionally, the total EDI values of individual exposure pathways were estimated and ranked as follows: indoor air (138.44 ng/kg-bw/day) > sunscreen application (37.2 ng/kg-bw/day) > drinking water (21.87 ng/kg-bw/day) > indoor dust (9.24 ng/kg-bw/day). Moreover, we successfully tailored the Sankey diagram to depict the EDI proportion of individual organic UV filters from four exposure pathways. It was noted that EHMC (ethylhexyl methoxycinnamate) and EHS (ethylhexyl salicylate) dominated the contribution of EDI (72 %) via indoor air exposure routes. This study serves as a crucial reference for enhancing public health risk awareness concerning organic UV filters, with a special focus on the vulnerable populations such as infants and children.

Topics & Concepts

Hazard quotientPopulationEnvironmental healthUV filterEnvironmental scienceExposure assessmentEnvironmental chemistryToxicologyIndoor air qualityHealth riskMedicineChemistryEnvironmental engineeringBiologyPhysicsOpticsAir Quality and Health ImpactsSkin Protection and AgingClimate Change and Health Impacts
Human exposure risk of organic UV filters: A comprehensive analysis based on primary exposure pathways | Litcius