COMMENT BY: MICHAEL GOUGH, Cato Institute
SUBJECT: Response to Dr. Milman's comment on EPA Cancer Risk Assessment Guidelines
DATE: August 30, 1999
Dr. Harry A. Milman's email compliments EPA for its efforts to
review its draft Cancer Risk Assessment Guidelines and suggests making
the guidelines more consumer friendly. My take on the guidelines and on
EPA is quite different.
EPA's big change in the draft guidelines is a commitment to
"consider all the evidence" and to abandon the linear, no-threshold
model (LNT) as the default procedure for estimating cancer risks. As an
alternative, EPA proposes using a safety factor approach, but it
provides few details about the magnitude of the safety factors.
David Gaylor of the National Center for Toxicological Research
(NCTR in Arkansas; I may not have the name exactly right) and,
independently, Steve Milloy and I in a Cato Policy Analysis,
(https://www.cato.org/pubs/pas/pa-263.html) point out that the practical
effect of using a method different from the LNT may be negligible. EPA
lists 5 factors that might be multiplied together to calculate the
appropriate safety factor. If each of those five factors is assigned a
value of 10, then the safety factor becomes 100,000. Use of a safety
factor that large produces estimates of acceptable exposure levels that
differ by a factor of about two from the acceptable level calculated by
use of the LNT.
Granted, using a safety factor of 100,000 is the extreme, and
EPA does not stipulate that it always be so large. But, in fact,
arguing about risk estimation models is besides the point. EPA is
guided by policy; not by guidelines, let alone by science.
EPA has carried out two high visibility exercises with the draft
guidelines in mind. The "dioxin re-assessment" completed in 1994, was
reviewed and trashed by the EPA's Science Advisory Board in 1995. All
the evidence considered leads almost every observer to conclude that the
LNT is not applicable to dioxin, and the SAB refused to accept EPA's
reliance on it to estimate risks from dioxin. (EPA told the SAB in May
1995 that a revised re-assessment would be available in 6 months. The
SAB and everyone else is still waiting.) There was little justification
for EPA's use of the LNT and none for its out-of-hand rejection of other
methods to estimate the cancer risk from dioxin.
In last December's rule making about the risks from chloroform
in drinking water, EPA accepted the judgment of its scientists that
those risks can be estimated using a safety factor approach. Despite
that acceptance, the agency decided to apply the LNT to chloroform
risks. Why? Because EPA recognizes that using anything else than the
LNT would be a big change, and, evidently, it can't make such a change
based on science. It has to consult with stake holders.
There's no reason to think that new guidelines, if they are ever
made final, are going to change EPA policy.
But far beyond that, everyone knows that environmental
pollutants contribute little to the cancer burden. What have we, as a
nation, purchased for the $100,000,000 we have spent for dioxin
cleanup? What do we gain from a policy that insists that any level of
exposure to chloroform in water increases cancer risk? In both cases,
very little, and, perhaps, nothing.
New guidelines aren't the answer. The answer, if it ever comes,
will be from politicians courageous enough to apply science to the
assessment of environmental health risks and to tell the public that its
resources are being squandered on trivial or nonexistent health risks.
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