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Application of systematic evidence mapping to identify available data on the potential human health hazards of selected market-relevant azo dyes

Authors :
Channa Keshava
Suna Nicolai
Suryanarayana V. Vulimiri
Florenz A. Cruz
Narges Ghoreishi
Sven Knueppel
Ariane Lenzner
Patrick Tarnow
Jens T. Vanselow
Brittany Schulz
Amanda Persad
Nancy Baker
Kristina A. Thayer
Antony J. Williams
Ralph Pirow
Source :
Environment International, Vol 176, Iss , Pp 107952- (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2023.

Abstract

Background: Azo dyes are used in textiles and leather clothing. Human exposure can occur from wearing textiles containing azo dyes. Since the body’s enzymes and microbiome can cleave azo dyes, potentially resulting in mutagenic or carcinogenic metabolites, there is also an indirect health concern on the parent compounds. While several hazardous azo dyes are banned, many more are still in use that have not been evaluated systematically for potential health concerns. This systematic evidence map (SEM) aims to compile and categorize the available toxicological evidence on the potential human health risks of a set of 30 market-relevant azo dyes. Methods: Peer-reviewed and gray literature was searched and over 20,000 studies were identified. These were filtered using Sciome Workbench for Interactive computer-Facilitated Text-mining (SWIFT) Review software with evidence stream tags (human, animal, in vitro) yielding 12,800 unique records. SWIFT Active (a machine-learning software) further facilitated title/abstract screening. DistillerSR software was used for additional title/abstract, full-text screening, and data extraction. Results: 187 studies were identified that met populations, exposures, comparators, and outcomes (PECO) criteria. From this pool, 54 human, 78 animal, and 61 genotoxicity studies were extracted into a literature inventory. Toxicological evidence was abundant for three azo dyes (also used as food additives) and sparse for five of the remaining 27 compounds. Complementary search in ECHA’s REACH database for summaries of unpublished study reports revealed evidence for all 30 dyes. The question arose of how this information can be fed into an SEM process. Proper identification of prioritized dyes from various databases (including U.S. EPA’s CompTox Chemicals Dashboard) turned out to be a challenge. Evidence compiled by this SEM project can be evaluated for subsequent use in problem formulation efforts to inform potential regulatory needs and prepare for a more efficient and targeted evaluation in the future for human health assessments.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01604120
Volume :
176
Issue :
107952-
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Environment International
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.b8ac8a955bc2478d95193d4a59c09225
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envint.2023.107952