david loschke18 march 2005

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1 David Loschke 18 March 2005 New Zealand Timber Preservation New Zealand Timber Preservation Council Annual Conference 2005 Council Annual Conference 2005 The Australian Pesticides & Veterinary Medicines Authority Review of Arsenic Timber Treatments

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New Zealand Timber Preservation Council Annual Conference 2005. The Australian Pesticides & Veterinary Medicines Authority Review of Arsenic Timber Treatments. David Loschke18 March 2005. NATIONAL REGISTRATION SCHEME FOR AGVET CHEMICALS. APVMA is an independent statutory authority - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: David Loschke18 March 2005

1

David Loschke 18 March 2005

New Zealand Timber Preservation New Zealand Timber Preservation Council Annual Conference 2005Council Annual Conference 2005

The Australian Pesticides & Veterinary Medicines Authority

Review of Arsenic Timber Treatments

Page 2: David Loschke18 March 2005

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APVMA is an independent statutory authority

APVMA regulates up to point of retail sale

States & Territories control usage

NATIONAL REGISTRATION SCHEME FOR AGVET CHEMICALS

Page 3: David Loschke18 March 2005

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APVMA OPERATING ENVIRONMENTAPVMA OPERATING ENVIRONMENT

External Advisers

State Agricultural Departments

Office of Chemical Safety

Dept. Environment and Heritage

Office of Gene Technology Regulator

PARLIAMENT

MINISTER

BOARD

APVMA

Internal Service Providers

Stakeholders

State Agricultural and Environmental Departments

Agvet Chemical Industry

Grower Organisations

Consumers and the Community

Page 4: David Loschke18 March 2005

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APVMA ROLESAPVMA ROLES

Assessment of Chemicals

Before sale (registration)

On the market (review)

On-Going Quality of Chemicals

Vet GMP

Ag Quality Assurance

Compliance

Surveillance and enforcement

Adverse experience reporting

Page 5: David Loschke18 March 2005

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Human health must be protectedHuman health must be protected

Page 6: David Loschke18 March 2005

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The environment must be protectedThe environment must be protected

Page 7: David Loschke18 March 2005

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Australia’s international trade must be protected tooAustralia’s international trade must be protected too

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Section 14 Agvet Code

Can only approve if Is not an undue hazard to people (handling or residues)

No unintended harmful effect on plants, animals or the environment

Does not unduly prejudice trade (residues)

Is effective

Cannot trade risk against benefit

CRITERIA FOR ASSESSMENT

Page 9: David Loschke18 March 2005

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Regulatory ScienceRegulatory Science

Technical science functionAssessing hazardsAssessing risks

Policy aspectDetermining adequate safety marginsEstablishing formal health standards

Page 10: David Loschke18 March 2005

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Environment

Toxicology / human health

Occupational Health and Safety

Efficacy and Crop Safety

Residues, including overseas trade aspects of residues in food commodities

Chemistry and Manufacture

KEY DATA REQUIREMENTS

Page 11: David Loschke18 March 2005

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Chemical HazardsChemical Hazards

Acute Toxic EffectsImmediate or short term toxic effects

Longer Term EffectsCancerBirth Defects

Threshold Effect

Page 12: David Loschke18 March 2005

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Studies for Toxic HazardStudies for Toxic Hazard

Acute Toxic Effects (immediate)

Oral

Dermal

Inhalation

Eye and skin irritancy

Skin sensitisation

Page 13: David Loschke18 March 2005

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Studies for Toxic HazardStudies for Toxic Hazard

Longer Term EffectsRepeat dose studies

Short-term (28 day), Subchronic (3 to 12 months), Chronic/Carcinogenicity (lifetime studies in 2 species)

Reproduction studies

Developmental studies

Genotoxicity studies

Neurotoxicity studies

Immunotoxicity studies

Endocrine effect studies

Page 14: David Loschke18 March 2005

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Arsenic Timber Treatments Review

Page 15: David Loschke18 March 2005

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Review FindingsReview Findings

For CCA Products

Treatment plants to meet Australian Standards

Certain end uses to be discontinued

Labels specify circumstances where CCA used

Treated timber must be branded

Product label instructions to be improved

Page 16: David Loschke18 March 2005

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Review FindingsReview Findings

In addition

CCA proposed to be a Restricted Chemical Product

CCA Worker exposure data to be supplied

Arsenic trioxide anti-termite treatments OK’d

Page 17: David Loschke18 March 2005

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ImplementationImplementation

Action Regulatory Tool Agency or Body

Stop certain uses

Specify permitted uses

APVMA Label &

State Control of Use Powers

States & Territories

Stop treated timber from being used in certain types of situations

Australian Building Codes

Australian Standards

And through Policy & dissemination of information

ABCB

 

Standards Australia

State Agencies (Parks & Wildlife, DOCS, Education Depts.)

Local Governments

School Boards

Other major timber users

Kidsafe

Page 18: David Loschke18 March 2005

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Why were some uses discontinued?

Page 19: David Loschke18 March 2005

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Natural Human ExposuresNatural Human Exposures

Severe arsenic exposure can come from well water in certain areas of the world.

Argentina and Chile

Bangladesh and northern India

Japan

Taiwan

Page 20: David Loschke18 March 2005

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Extreme well water exposures to arsenicExtreme well water exposures to arsenic

Natural Human Exposure to Arsenic

0

100

200

300

400

500

600

700

800

900

1

micrograms/kg bw/day

Range of Exposures

Page 21: David Loschke18 March 2005

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Australian estimates of exposureAustralian estimates of exposure

Australian Children's Arsenic Exposure

0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1

1.2

1.4

1.6

1.8

2

1 2 3

micrograms/kg bw/day

CCA Decks

Background

Page 22: David Loschke18 March 2005

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Extreme well water exposures to arsenicExtreme well water exposures to arsenic

Natural Human Exposure to Arsenic

0

100

200

300

400

500

600

700

800

900

1

micrograms/kg bw/day

Range of Exposures

Page 23: David Loschke18 March 2005

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Australian estimates of exposureAustralian estimates of exposure

Australian Children's Arsenic Exposure

0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1

1.2

1.4

1.6

1.8

2

1 2 3

micrograms/kg bw/day

CCA Decks

Background

Page 24: David Loschke18 March 2005

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Words from the Legislation Words from the Legislation

– the Authority must be “satisfied” that

use of the chemical product “would not

be an undue hazard to the safety of

people exposed to it” and “would not

be likely to have an effect that is

harmful to human beings”

Page 25: David Loschke18 March 2005

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Considerations for ArsenicConsiderations for Arsenic

Critical Points

Proven human carcinogen

Mechanism not understood

Group at risk = children

Product variability

Page 26: David Loschke18 March 2005

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Considerations for ArsenicConsiderations for Arsenic

Critical Points

Proven human carcinogen

Mechanism not understood

Group at risk = children

Product variability

Inadequate Exposure Data

Page 27: David Loschke18 March 2005

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Australian estimates of exposureAustralian estimates of exposure

Australian Children's Arsenic Exposure

0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1

1.2

1.4

1.6

1.8

2

1 2 3

micrograms/kg bw/day

CCA Decks

Background

Page 28: David Loschke18 March 2005

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Words from the Legislation Words from the Legislation

– the Authority must be “satisfied” that

use of the chemical product “would not

be an undue hazard to the safety of

people exposed to it” and “would not

be likely to have an effect that is

harmful to human beings”

Page 29: David Loschke18 March 2005

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Thank You