Jean-Christophe Balouet’s scientific contributions

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Publications (1)


Concentration of the mean value of reported endocrine disruptors compared against threshold exposure values
Using the grey literature to better understand the potential health impacts of cabin air quality
  • Article
  • Full-text available

May 2023

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109 Reads

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2 Citations

Jean-Christophe Balouet

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Jean-Christophe Delahaye

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Michel F.A Mulder

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This paper presents an extensive database of 450 chemicals reported in the grey literature (technical reports and documents) in association with the aircraft cabin environment. 72% (325 chemicals) of these exhibited toxic properties. The most affected target organs were skin (302 chemicals), eyes (294 chemicals), respiratory system (234 chemicals), and central nervous system (94 chemicals). The database includes available occupational exposure limits for a wide range of these pollutants (118). Results from technical reports on pollutant levels in aircraft were compared against their threshold health-based screening values. When performing a human health risk assessment on a chemical-by-chemical basis, there were no exceedances of average concentrations against workplace exposure limits. However, there were exceedances in maximum reported concentrations for ozone and acrolein. When chemical exposure was assessed additively for chemicals affecting the same target organs, the average concentrations did not exceed workplace limits. However, there were exceedances for maximum concentrations for compounds that targeted the eyes, skin, cardiovascular system, blood, and respiratory system. When performing a conservative additive risk assessment of endocrine disruptors (and potential endocrine disruptors), exceedances were observed when compared with no observed adverse effect levels (NOAEL) and workplace exposure thresholds established for confirmed endocrine disruption. Our results indicate that no single chemical is responsible for the adverse health effects reported by aircrew and instead point towards a combination of chemicals and additional factors. This work stresses the need for more comprehensive assessments that are coupled with epidemiological studies and risk assessments that consider exposure to multiple pollutants and specificities of the environment inside aircraft.

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Citations (1)


... We finally selected 22 studies, i.e., nine peer-reviewed papers, four health hazard evaluation reports from occupational safety and health organizations, three from the American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-conditioning Engineers (ASHREA, 2016), one aviation accident report, one databank from the Global Cabin Air Quality Executive (GCAQE), two studies from the European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) and the European Commission, and two abstracts. So, a considerable amount of data on cabin air quality are presented in technical reports of environmental forensic investigations, regulatory agencies, aviation authorities, aircraft manufacturers or occupational safety and health organizations (Balouet et al., 2023). We included these non-peer-reviewed data in our review; as a result, 13 of the reviewed 22 papers may contain methodological imperfections. ...

Reference:

The role of carbon monoxide in aerotoxic syndrome
Using the grey literature to better understand the potential health impacts of cabin air quality