# Correction: The Trump EPA’s first TSCA risk evaluation is a skyscraper of cards, not just a house

*Published:* 2019-01-08
*Author:* 

*Richard Denison, Ph.D.,* is a Lead Senior Scientist. *[Jennifer McPartland, Ph.D., ](https://www.edf.org/people/jennifer-mcpartland)is a Senior Scientist.*

We [blogged before ](https://blogs.edf.org/health/2018/12/19/the-trump-epas-first-risk-evaluation-under-the-new-tsca-is-a-house-of-cards/)the holiday break about how EPA used a single, unverified and conflicted estimate of worker exposure to build a whole house of cards and then used it to conclude that Pigment Violet 29 (or PV29) poses no risk to human health.

But upon further consideration, we need to issue a correction: It’s not a house, it’s a veritable skyscraper of cards EPA has constructed. That’s because EPA took its highly suspect worker exposure level and combined it with a hazard value EPA erroneously asserts demonstrates minimal hazard, in violation of its own and other authoritative guidance.

The hazard value EPA relies on is from what is called a “screening reproduction and developmental toxicity study” that used a standardized method developed by the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), shorthanded “[OECD-421](https://www.oecd-ilibrary.org/environment/test-no-421-reproduction-developmental-toxicity-screening-test_9789264264380-en).” This, like all other test data EPA relies on in its draft risk evaluation, is a short-term test and does not evaluate the potential for a chemical to exert chronic effects. Yet EPA uses this study to assert that PV29 causes no reproduction or developmental effects whatsoever. And it asserts (see [page 31](https://www.epa.gov/assessing-and-managing-chemicals-under-tsca/draft-risk-evaluation-pigment-violet-29)): “As no effects were observed up to the limit-dose, further chronic toxicity testing is not needed.”

Yet [OECD’s test guideline](https://www.oecd-ilibrary.org/environment/test-no-421-reproduction-developmental-toxicity-screening-test_9789264264380-en) (page 2) explicitly states that test results derived using this method ***cannot be used to conclude there are no effects***:

This test does not provide complete information on all aspects of reproduction and development. In particular, *it offers only limited means of detecting post-natal manifestations of pre-natal exposure, or effects that may be induced during post-natal exposure. Due (amongst other reasons) to the relatively small numbers of animals in the dose groups, the selectivity of the end points, and the short duration of the study*, *this method will not provide evidence for definite claims of no effects*.

Let us repeat that last bit: “*This method will not provide evidence for definite claims of no effects*.”

Thus, EPA simply cannot conclude even that the test establishes the chemical causes no acute effects, let alone that it has no chronic toxicity or that chronic toxicity testing is not needed.

Lest EPA be tempted to spurn OECD, EPA’s own equivalent test guideline – “[Health Effects Test Guideline OPPTS 870.3550 Reproductive/Developmental Toxicity Screening Test](https://www.regulations.gov/document?D=EPA-HQ-OPPT-2009-0156-0015)” – includes the very same admonition:

This test does not provide complete information on all aspects of reproduction and development. In particular, *it offers only limited means of detecting postnatal manifestations of prenatal exposure, or effects that may be induced during postnatal exposure. Due (amongst other reasons) to the relatively small numbers of animals in the dose groups, the selectivity of the end points, and the short duration of the study, this method will not provide evidence for definite claims of no effects*.

We should note that EPA does, in a separate section of the draft risk evaluation, paraphrase (without citation) the first part of this quote’s admonition. But EPA conveniently leaves out the second part, which would otherwise thwart EPA’s intent to conclude the chemical presents no risk and to argue that no further testing is needed.

The problem is that somebody is going to get badly hurt when this skyscraper of cards collapses.