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Environmental Health Perspectives (EHP) is a monthly journal of peer-reviewed research and news on the impact of the environment on human health. EHP is published by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences and its content is free online. Print issues are available by paid subscription.DISCLAIMER
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Environmental Health Perspectives Volume 108, Number 3, March 2000 Open Access
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Benchmark Concentrations for Methylmercury Obtained from the Seychelles Child Development Study

Kenny S. Crump,1 Cynthia Van Landingham,1 Conrad Shamlaye,2 Christopher Cox,3 Phillip W. Davidson,4 Gary J. Myers,5 and Thomas W. Clarkson6

1The K.S. Crump Group, Inc., ICF Kaiser, Ruston, Louisiana, USA
2Ministry of Health, Victoria, Mahé, Republic of Seychelles 3Department of Biostatistics, 4Strong Center for Developmental Disabilities, School of Medicine, University of Rochester, Rochester, New York, USA
5Department of Neurology, University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, Rochester, New York
6Department of Environmental Medicine, University of Rochester Medical School, Rochester, New York, USA

Abstract

Methylmercury is a neurotoxin at high exposures, and the developing fetus is particularly susceptible. Because exposure to methylmercury is primarily through fish, concern has been expressed that the consumption of fish by pregnant women could adversely affect their fetuses. The reference dose for methylmercury established by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency was based on a benchmark analysis of data from a poisoning episode in Iraq in which mothers consumed seed grain treated with methylmercury during pregnancy. However, exposures in this study were short term and at much higher levels than those that result from fish consumption. In contrast, the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR) based its proposed minimal risk level on a no-observed-adverse-effect level (NOAEL) derived from neurologic testing of children in the Seychelles Islands, where fish is an important dietary staple. Because no adverse effects from mercury were seen in the Seychelles study, the ATSDR considered the mean exposure in the study to be a NOAEL. However, a mean exposure may not be a good indicator of a no-effect exposure level. To provide an alternative basis for deriving an appropriate human exposure level from the Seychelles study, we conducted a benchmark analysis on these data. Our analysis included responses from batteries of neurologic tests applied to children at 6, 19, 29, and 66 months of age. We also analyzed developmental milestones (age first walked and first talked) . We explored a number of dose-response models, sets of covariates to include in the models, and definitions of background response. Our analysis also involved modeling responses expressed as both continuous and quantal data. The most reliable analyses were considered to be represented by 144 calculated lower statistical bounds on the benchmark dose (BMDLs ; the lower statistical bound on maternal mercury hair level corresponding to an increase of 0.1 in the probability of an adverse response) derived from the modeling of continuous responses. The average value of the BMDL in these 144 analyses was 25 ppm mercury in maternal hair, with a range of 19 to 30 ppm. Key words: , , , , , , , . Environ Health Perspect 108:257-263 (2000) . [Online 3 February 2000]

http://ehpnet1.niehs.nih.gov/docs/2000/108p257-263crump/ abstract.html

Address correspondence to K. Crump, The K.S. Crump Group, Inc., ICF Kaiser, 602 East Georgia Avenue, Ruston, LA 71270 USA. Telephone: (318) 242-5019. Fax: (318) 255-4960. E-mail: kcrump@iamerica.net

Support for this work was provided by the Electric Power Research Institute, Palo Alto, California.

Received 18 May 1999 ; accepted 2 September 1999.


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