Conduct of feasibility and in life studies to evaluate systemic exposure to crumb rubber via multiple routes

NIH RePORTER · NIH · N01 · $332,525 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

The goal of this project is to evaluate feasibility and systemic exposure following short-term administration of crumb rubber by various exposure scenarios (gavage, drinking water, feed, inhalation and dermal). Over 11,000 synthetic turf fields exist in the U.S., with approximately 1,200 being added annually. The component of turf that is of most concern is crumb rubber infill, made from recycled automotive tires. Crumb rubber contains numerous potential carcinogenic and toxic substances, yet the exposure of people playing on installed fields to these hazardous components is not well understood. Information gained from NTP toxicology studies will provide public health agencies with information to inform exposure and health assessments. There are significant challenges to the conduct of toxicology studies due to the physical nature of the crumb rubber material. In addition to informing feasibility of conduct of future NTP toxicity studies and provide information on systemic exposure by various routes, these data will aid other researchers design toxicity studies and interpret the resulting data. Keywords: toxicity, crumb rubber, systemic exposure, artificial turf.

Key facts

NIH application ID
10143134
Project number
273201400015C-P00017-9999-18
Recipient
BATTELLE MEMORIAL INSTITUTE
Principal Investigator
BARNEY SPARROW
Activity code
N01
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2020
Award amount
$332,525
Award type
Project period
2014-04-15 → 2021-04-14