PREMIER partners publish new scientific paper: Defining the data gap: What do we know about environmental exposure, hazards and risks of pharmaceuticals in the European aquatic environment?

Active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) and their transformation products inevitably enter waterways where they might cause adverse effects to aquatic organisms. Identifying the potential risks of APIs in the environment is therefore a goal and current strategic direction of environmental management described in the EU Strategic Approach to Pharmaceuticals in the Environment and the Green Deal. This is challenged by a paucity of monitoring and ecotoxicity data to adequately describe risks.
In this study we analyze measured environmental concentrations (MECs) of APIs from 5933 sites in 25 European countries as documented in the EMPODAT database or collected by the German Environment Agency for the time period between 1997 and 2020. These data were compared with empirical data on the ecotoxicity of APIs from the U.S. EPA ECOTOX database.

Although 1763 uniquely identifiable APIs are registered with the European Medicines Agency (EMA) for sale in the European Economic Area (EEA), only 312 (17.7%) of these are included in publicly available monitoring data, 36 (1.8%) compounds have sufficient ecotoxicological data to derive a PNEC, and only 27 (1.5%) compounds meet both the hazard and exposure data requirements required to perform an environmental risk assessment according to EMA guidelines. Four of these compounds (14.8%) had a median risk quotient (RQ) > 1. Endocrine disruptors had the highest median RQ, with 7.0 and 5.6 for 17α-ethinyl-estradiol and 17β-estradiol respectively.

See the article here.