The Dilemma of Perfluorooctanoate (PFOA) Human Half-life

By Michael Dourson and Bernard Gadagbui
Regul Toxicol Pharmacol
August 25, 2021
DOI: 10.1016/j.yrtph.2021.105025

Disparity in the results from human observational and clinical studies is not uncommon, but risk assessment efforts often judge one set of data more relevant with the loss of valuable information. The assessment for perfluorooctanoate (PFOA) is a good example of this problem. The estimation of its safe dose is disparate among government groups due in part to differences in understanding of its half-life in humans. These differences are due in part to incomplete information on sources of exposure in the human observational half-life studies, which have been routinely acknowledged, but until recently not well understood. Exposure information is thus critical in understanding, and possibly resolving, this disparity in PFOA safe dose, and potentially for disparities with similar chemistries when both human observational and clinical findings are available. We explore several hypotheses to explain this disparity in PFOA half-life from human observational studies in light of findings of a clinical study in humans and relevant exposure information from a recent international meeting of the Society of Toxicology and Environmental Chemistry (SETAC). Based on information from both human observational studies and clinical data, we proposed a range for the half-life for PFOA of 0.5 to 1.5 years, which would likely raise many existing regulatory safe levels if all other parameters stayed the same.

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