| Chronic Beryllium Disease and Cancer Risk Estimates with Uncertainty for Beryllium Released to the Air from the Rocky Flats Plant Patricia D. McGavran,1 Arthur S. Rood,2 and John E. Till3 1Environmental Risk Assessment, Inc., Boise, Idaho, USA
2K-Spar, Inc., Rigby, Idaho, USA
3Risk Assessments Corporation, Neeses, South Carolina, USA Abstract Beryllium was released into the air from routine operations and three accidental fires at the Rocky Flats Plant (RFP) in Colorado from 1958 to 1989. We evaluated environmental monitoring data and developed estimates of airborne concentrations and their uncertainties and calculated lifetime cancer risks and risks of chronic beryllium disease to hypothetical receptors. This article discusses exposure-response relationships for lung cancer and chronic beryllium disease. We assigned a distribution to cancer slope factor values based on the relative risk estimates from an occupational epidemiologic study used by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to determine the slope factors. We used the regional atmospheric transport code for Hanford emission tracking atmospheric transport model for exposure calculations because it is particularly well suited for long-term annual-average dispersion estimates and it incorporates spatially varying meteorologic and environmental parameters. We accounted for model prediction uncertainty by using several multiplicative stochastic correction factors that accounted for uncertainty in the dispersion estimate, the meteorology, deposition, and plume depletion. We used Monte Carlo techniques to propagate model prediction uncertainty through to the final risk calculations. We developed nine exposure scenarios of hypothetical but typical residents of the RFP area to consider the lifestyle, time spent outdoors, location, age, and sex of people who may have been exposed. We determined geometric mean incremental lifetime cancer incidence risk estimates for beryllium inhalation for each scenario. The risk estimates were < 10-6. Predicted air concentrations were well below the current reference concentration derived by the EPA for beryllium sensitization. Key words: atmospheric transport modeling, beryllium, chronic beryllium disease, exposure assessment, lung cancer, uncertainty. Environ Health Perspect 107:731-744 (1999) . [Online 3 August 1999] http://ehpnet1.niehs.nih.gov/docs/1999/107p731-744mcgavran/ abstract.html Address correspondence to P.D. McGavran, 841 Harcourt Road, Boise, ID 83702-1817. Telephone: (208) 336-5617. Fax: (208) 336-0045. E-mail: mcgavran@micron.net We thank M. Abbott and the CDPHE Health Advisory Panel for reviewing drafts of this article. Funding for this work was provided by the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment under contract 100APRCODE391 to the Risk Assessments Corporation. Received 16 November 1998 ; accepted 6 May 1999. The full version of this article is available for free in HTML format. |