EPA Tools & Resources Webinar: U.S. Federal Research Action Plan on Recycled Tire Crumb Rubber Used on Synthetic Turf Playing Fields and Playgrounds: Exposure Characterization Final Report (Part 2) Findings and Conclusions
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The goal of the research under the Federal Research Action Plan on Recycled Tire Crumb Used on Playing Fields and Playgrounds (FRAP) is to characterize potential human exposures to the substances associated with recycled tire crumb rubber used on synthetic turf fields. The results of the research activities under the FRAP are being documented in two parts. The previously released Part 1 Report (EPA/600/R-19/051, available at: http://www.epa.gov/TireCrumb) documents the tire crumb characterization activities and results. A recently released Part 2 report documents the results from the pilot exposure characterization research study conducted by EPA and CDC/ATSDR, and includes the supplemental biomonitoring study conducted by CDC/ATSDR. A pilot-scale human exposure measurement sub-study was implemented to further develop and deploy appropriate sample collection methods and generate data to better understand potential exposures that may occur when individuals frequently use synthetic turf fields. A subset of the participants that provided questionnaire responses were asked to participate in the exposure measurement pilot study based on their field usage. A set of personal, biological, and field environmental samples was collected around a sport or training activity performed on a participating synthetic turf field. Personal and environmental samples were analyzed for metals, volatile organic compounds (VOCs), and semi-volatile organic compounds (SVOCs). For the biomonitoring pilot, blood and urine samples collected before and after participant practice sessions were analyzed for selected metal and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) metabolites, respectively. Following the pilot-scale biomonitoring effort, ATSDR designed and conducted a supplemental biomonitoring study measuring PAH urinary metabolites for a larger number of synthetic field users and included athletes playing on natural grass fields for comparison. Researchers utilized information from the literature and data collected in this study to conduct exposure pathway modeling on six selected chemicals for athletes using synthetic turf fields with tire crumb rubber infill. This effort aimed to elucidate which exposure pathways are likely to be the biggest contributors to total exposure for different types of tire crumb rubber constituents and to assess the availability, robustness, and adequacy of tire crumb and exposure measurement data and data for exposure model parameters in the context of accuracy and uncertainty for exposure estimation. Results from the Part 2 Exposure Characterization report will be conveyed to the public in an EPA Tools and Resources Webinar.