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Executive Summary: Diesel Exhaust: Critical Analysis of Emissions, Exposure, and Health Effects

Diesel engine emissions are highly complex mixtures. They consist of a wide range of organic and inorganic compounds distributed among the gaseous and particulate phases. Public health concern has arisen about these emissions for these reasons:

Diesel emissions have the potential to cause adverse health effects. These effects include cancer and other pulmonary and cardiovascular diseases. However, diesel engines are only one of many sources of ambient particulate matter and gaseous air pollutants. Therefore, it is difficult to measure the exposures from various sources, and to distinguish the potential health risks attributable to exposure to diesel exhaust from those attributable to other air pollutants.

For over a decade, HEI has supported a broad-based research program to evaluate the health risks of diesel emissions, including investigations of carcinogenesis, modeling studies, and emissions characterization. The purpose of this Special Report is to examine what is known, not known, and still uncertain about the health risks of exposure to diesel emissions. The HEI Diesel Working Group, which was appointed by the HEI Review Committee and chaired by Dr. Gareth M. Green, evaluated the research on diesel emissions supported by the Institute and other organizations. The Working Group included members of the HEI Health Research Committee, Health Review Committee, staff, and other scientists.

The HEI Diesel Working Group focused its evaluation on a set of issues that it thought were critical to assessing the carcinogenic risks of exposure to diesel exhaust. As a first step, members of the Working Group prepared background papers that addressed these issues. These papers underwent external peer review by qualified experts and form Part II of this report. They include in-depth discussions of emissions, exposure, toxicity, carcinogenicity, and dose-response relations.1

The Working Group then met to:

Part I of this report presents the Working Group's conclusions and addresses their implications for risk assessments of diesel engine emissions. The major findings are discussed in this summary.

EMISSIONS
The composition of diesel exhaust varies considerably depending on engine type and operating conditions, fuel, lubricating oil, and whether an emissions control system is present. Diesel engine emissions have changed dramatically over the last 30 years because of improvements in engine technology, emissions controls, and fuel formulation. Emissions of oxides of nitrogen and particulate matter from the diesel engines introduced in the late 1980s and early 1990s are significantly lower than those from older engines. As a result, characterizations of modern-day diesel exhaust cannot be used to estimate past exposures, nor can they be used reliably to project future emission profiles.

EXPOSURE
It is very difficult to assess exposure to diesel emissions because they are highly complex mixtures and constitute only a small portion of a broader mix of air pollutants. For example, combustion of other materials, such as fossil fuels and tobacco, produce many of the same chemical components that are present in diesel emissions; furthermore, both natural and man-made sources of respirable particles are common. No single constituent of diesel exhaust serves as a unique marker of exposure; however, scientists can use the levels of fine particles or elemental carbon (both of which are much higher in diesel emissions than in other combustion products) as surrogate indices of diesel exhaust particulate matter. When estimating exposure to diesel emissions, the following factors need to be considered:

Exposure to diesel exhaust particulate matter has been assessed in occupational settings and some ambient environments. Although the existing data are limited, some estimates of the range of human exposure to diesel emissions can be made:

ANIMAL RESPONSES
The carcinogenic activity of diesel emissions has been convincingly demonstrated in rats. Nearly lifetime exposure for 35 hours or more per week to high concentrations of diesel exhaust particulate matter (2,000 to 10,000 µg/m3) causes an exposure-dependent increase in the incidence of benign and malignant lung tumors in rats. No consistent evidence suggests that diesel emissions induce cancer in rats at sites other than the lung. Prolonged exposure to diesel emissions does not produce lung tumors in hamsters, and the results in mice are equivocal, which suggests that species-specific factors play a critical role in the induction of lung tumors by diesel emissions.

Recent reports from two independent laboratories support the idea that the particle-associated organic chemicals play little or no role in the development of lung tumors in rats exposed to high concentrations of diesel emissions. No significant differences were noted in tumor incidence or histopathologic characteristics between rats exposed to diesel exhaust and those exposed to carbon black (a surrogate for the diesel particles minus the adsorbed organic compounds). These results do not completely eliminate a possible role for the adsorbed chemicals, some of which are potent mutagens and carcinogens. If bioavailable, they could play a role in carcinogenesis that might not be detectable in the rat bioassay because their effect is either too subtle or is masked by the overwhelming response of the rat's lungs to high concentrations of inhaled particles.

Even though the evidence strongly suggests that prolonged exposure to high concentrations of diesel exhaust particulate matter induces lung tumors in rats, the Diesel Working Group recommends caution in extrapolating these results to humans for the following reasons:

The Diesel Working Group cautioned that using the rat bioassay data (obtained at high-dose exposure levels) to make quantitative estimates of the carcinogenic risk of exposure to diesel emissions at environmentally relevant exposure concentrations may overestimate risk if the mathematical models used to extrapolate from high to low doses and from animals to humans do not (1) account for particle overload and associated inflammatory and proliferative processes, (2) recognize the apparent existence of a threshold for particle-induced biologic responses, such as impairment of lung clearance mechanisms, inflammation, cell proliferation, and tumor development, and (3) consider the mechanistic relation of the nongenotoxic injuries to the development of lung tumors in laboratory rats.

INTEGRATING EXPOSURE DATA WITH INFORMATION FROM HUMAN AND ANIMAL STUDIES TO CHARACTERIZE THE POTENTIAL CARCINOGENICITY OF DIESEL EMISSIONS
The Diesel Working Group found that it is not presently possible to base a risk characterization of diesel exhaust solely on either the human or the animal data. Instead, the Working Group evaluated and integrated the available information from diverse data sets to make the most informed judgments about the potential carcinogenicity of exposure to diesel exhaust.

Key issues concerning the human health risk of diesel exhaust are: Does particle overloading occur in humans under environmental exposure conditions, and if so, does it trigger processes that lead to lung cancer. In the rat, the animal species most sensitive to diesel exhaust, lung tumors are produced after nearly lifetime exposures for 35 hours or more per week to high concentrations of diesel exhaust particulate matter (2,000 to 10,000 µg/m3). These concentrations are approximately three orders of magnitude higher than current estimates of average atmospheric concentrations of diesel exhaust particulate matter (1 to 10 µg/m3). One mathematical extrapolation model suggests that lung clearance mechanisms would not be impaired in humans even if they were exposed continuously (24 hours per day) to levels of particulate matter in this ambient range. According to this model, the levels of respirable particles that would be needed to depress lung clearance mechanisms in humans under continuous exposure conditions are greater than 100 to 200 µg/m3. This, however, is an unlikely exposure scenario, even for most workers. Under more realistic intermittent exposure conditions (eight hours per day, five days per week), the model predicts that the concentration of particulate matter needed to impair lung clearance would be 500 to 1,000 µg/m3. Only a limited number of workers, primarily miners, are exposed to concentrations of diesel exhaust particulate matter close to this range.

If we assume that particle-induced mechanisms of lung tumorigenesis operate similarly in rats and humans, the analysis above implies that there is some biological rationale for extrapolating the rat bioassay data to the small population of workers who are routinely exposed to high concentrations (greater than 1,000 µg/m3) of diesel exhaust particulate matter and who may have impaired lung clearance mechanisms. Because of the large interspecies differences in particle clearance, the rat bioassay data also may be relevant to those workers who are exposed to levels of diesel particulate matter one order of magnitude lower (100 to 1,000 µg/m3). However, the toxicity and modeling data do not support the assumption that exposure to diesel exhaust particulate matter alone at the levels found in most ambient settings (1 to 10 µg/m3) would be sufficiently high to overwhelm lung clearance processes and, thus, induce lung tumors by a mechanism driven by inflammation and cell proliferation.

SUMMARY
A wealth of information is available about the potential for diesel emissions to cause cancer. However, the lack of definitive exposure data for the occupationally exposed study populations precludes using the available epidemiologic data to develop quantitative estimates of cancer risk. When appropriate human information is not available, some policymakers have relied on the results of animal bioassays to estimate human risk. This document raises questions about the validity of using the rat bioassay data to characterize the potential human risk associated with ambient exposure to diesel emissions. The reason for this uncertainty is that the mechanism of lung tumor induction that appears to operate in rats continuously exposed to high concentrations of diesel exhaust and other particulate matter may not be relevant to most humans, who are exposed intermittently to levels of diesel exhaust particulate matter that are two or three orders of magnitude lower than those used in the rat bioassays. The development of unique markers of exposure to diesel emissions and a better understanding of the mechanisms of carcinogenesis would help to establish scientifically valid links between the lung cancers observed in laboratory animals and the human disease, thus improving the accuracy of cancer risk assessments.


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