The Threshold of Toxicological Concern (TTC) is a pragmatic tool for the safety assessment: Case studies of cosmetic ingredients with low consumer exposure

The Threshold of Toxicological Concern (TTC) is an internationally accepted pragmatic and conservative tool for the safety assessment of substances, which is used in a wide range of regulatory contexts. The TTC approach produces human exposure threshold values (TTC values) originally derived by Munr...

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Published inRegulatory toxicology and pharmacology Vol. 123; p. 104964
Main Authors Bury, Dagmar, Head, Julia, Keller, Detlef, Klaric, Martina, Rose, Jane
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier Inc 01.07.2021
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Summary:The Threshold of Toxicological Concern (TTC) is an internationally accepted pragmatic and conservative tool for the safety assessment of substances, which is used in a wide range of regulatory contexts. The TTC approach produces human exposure threshold values (TTC values) originally derived by Munro from oral toxicity data on cancer and non-cancer toxicity endpoints. This database has been recently substantially enlarged by the COSMOS database, an enhanced oral non-cancer TTC dataset on a larger chemical domain, thereby resulting in a new, transparent and public TTC database also including 552 cosmetics-related chemicals. The 5th percentile point of departure value for each Cramer Class was determined, from which human exposure TTC values have been derived. The combined COSMOS/Munro dataset provided TTC values of 46, 6.2 and 2.3 μg/kg bw/day for Cramer Classes I, II or III, respectively. In order to demonstrate the diverse scope and successful application of the TTC concept to cosmetic ingredients including hair dyes, fragrances and plant-derived ingredients, Cosmetics Europe has prepared several case studies. Overall, the TTC concept is not only useful to replace animal testing but can also successfully be applied to the safety evaluation of cosmetic ingredients in the marketed formulas with low human exposure. •The TTC concept can be applied to cosmetic ingredients with low human exposure as demonstrated in 3 case studies.•The TTC approach is an appropriate strategic component for many cosmetic fragrances due to low use concentrations.•The TTC approach can be applied to hair dyes with low use concentration and intermittent consumer exposure.•The TTC approach is adequate for plant extracts provided an absence of genotoxic activity is demonstrated.
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ISSN:0273-2300
1096-0295
DOI:10.1016/j.yrtph.2021.104964