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Derivation of biomonitoring equivalent for inorganic tin for interpreting population-level urinary biomonitoring data.

Population-level biomonitoring of tin in urine has been conducted by the U.S. National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) and the National Nutrition and Health Study (ENNS - Étude nationale nutrition santé) in France. The general population is predominantly exposed to inorganic tin from the consumption of canned food and beverages. The National Institute for Public Health and the Environment of the Netherlands (RIVM) has established a tolerable daily intake (TDI) for chronic exposure to inorganic tin based on a NOAEL of 20 mg/kg bw per day from a 2-year feeding study in rats. Using a urinary excretion fraction (0.25%) from a controlled human study along with a TDI value of 0.2 mg/kg bw per day, a Biomonitoring Equivalent (BE) was derived for urinary tin (26 μg/g creatinine or 20 μg/L urine). The geometric mean and the 95th percentile tin urine concentrations of the general population in U.S. (0.705 and 4.5 μg/g creatinine) and France (0.51 and 2.28 μg/g creatinine) are below the BE associated with the TDI, indicating that the population exposure to inorganic tin is below the exposure guidance value of 0.2 mg/kg bw per day. Overall, the robustness of pharmacokinetic data forming the basis of the urinary BE development is medium. The availability of internal dose and kinetic data in the animal species forming the basis of the assessment could improve the overall confidence in the present assessment.

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