4.4 Article

National scale down-the-drain environmental risk assessment of oxybenzone in the United States

Journal

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ieam.4430

Keywords

BP-3; Down-the-drain freshwater aquatic risk assessment; Exposure modeling; UV filters

Funding

  1. Environmental Safety Committee (ESC)
  2. ESC chair, Andrea Carrao (Kao, USA)
  3. Personal Care Products Council (PCPC)

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This paper presents a freshwater environmental safety assessment of a key UV filter, oxybenzone, used in the United States, showing that oxybenzone is of low concern with a significant margin of safety as indicated by the comparison of predicted environmental concentration with predicted no-effect concentration.
Organic ultraviolet (UV) filters are used in cosmetic and personal care products (CPCPs) and over-the-counter (OTC) sunscreens, due to their ability to absorb solar radiation. When OTC and CPCP ingredients are washed down the drain, they can then enter freshwaters that receive wastewater treatment plant effluents. This paper presents a freshwater environmental safety assessment of a key UV filter, oxybenzone, used in OTC sunscreens and CPCPs in the United States. Exposure was characterized using iSTREEM (R), a spatially resolved aquatic exposure model developed for chemicals disposed of down the drain. iSTREEM (R) provides a comprehensive exposure assessment of oxybenzone concentrations in United States receiving waters through predicted environmental concentration (PEC) distributions representative of conditions across the region. A review of available hazard data was used to derive a predicted no-effect concentration (PNEC) using aquatic toxicity data and assessment factors. A safety assessment was conducted by comparing the PEC distribution with the PNEC. The results indicate that oxybenzone is of low concern and there is a significant margin of safety as the 90th percentile PEC is two orders of magnitude below the PNEC. These results are instrumental in demonstrating the environmental safety of key organic UV filters in the U.S. freshwater environment and will help prioritize future work. (c) 2021 Personal Care Products Council. Integrated Environmental Assessment and Management published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Society of Environmental Toxicology & Chemistry (SETAC)

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