Thallium Exposure Secondary to Commercial Kale Chip Consumption: California Case Highlights Opportunities for Improved Surveillance and Toxicological Understanding
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Objectives
3. Household Thallium Investigation
3.1. A Household Cluster of Elevated Random Urine Thallium Levels
3.2. Public Health Investigation and Findings
3.2.1. Household Exposure Survey and Environmental Assessment
3.2.2. Clinical Intervention and Ongoing Monitoring
4. Discussion
4.1. Opportunities for Improved Toxicological Understanding
4.1.1. Lack of Human Studies Representing Chronic Thallium Exposure
4.1.2. Role for Further Animal Studies
4.2. Opportunities for Improved Food Safety Surveillance and Regulatory Actions
4.2.1. Thallium Accumulation in Brassicas
4.2.2. Role for Further Monitoring of Thallium in Food Supply
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Acknowledgments
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
CDPH | California Department of Public Health |
NHANES | National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey |
EPA | United Stated Environmental Protection Agency |
FDA | United States Food and Drug Agency |
IPCS | International Programme on Chemical Safety |
RfD | Reference dose |
NTP | National Institutes of Health National Toxicology Program |
Appendix A
Organization | Reference Levels (mg/kg-day) or Urine Tl (µg/L) | Supporting Studies | Limitations |
---|---|---|---|
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) | RfD range: 8.0 × 10−5 to 9.0 × 10−5 (withdrawn in 2009) | [18] U.S. EPA. IRIS Toxicological Review of Thallium And Compounds. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. September 2009.EPA/635/R-08/001F. [31] Stoltz ML, Stedham MA, Brown LK, et al. 1986, Subchronic (90 day) toxicity of thallium (I) sulfate in Sprague-Dawley rats. Report to U.S. EPA, Office of Solid Waste, Washington, DC, by Midwest Research Institute, Kansas City, MO. | Lack of confidence in the key toxicological study in rats (Stoltz 1986; as cited by EPA 2009). The data gaps of the 90-day oral gavage study discussed by EPA in their review included: “High background incidence of alopecia, lack of histopathological examination of skin tissue in low- and mid-dose groups, and inadequate examination of objective measures of neurotoxicity”. |
U.S. EPA Superfund Risk Assessment | PPRTV: subchronic and chronic provisional RfDs ranging from 1 × 10−5 to 4 × 10−5 | [54] U.S. EPA. Provisional Peer-Reviewed Toxicity Values for Thallium (Soluble Salts). U.S. EPA, Washington, DC, EPA/690/R-12/026F, 2012. | Used data from 1986 study by Midwest Research Institute. |
International Programme on Chemical Safety (IPCS) proposed in 1996 Environmental Health Criteria (EHC) 182 | EHC 182 aligned with the conclusion of the 2009 U.S. EPA review that no health-based guidance value could be determined. IPCS proposed to base a safe intake of thallium on the 5 µg/L urine value, which was reported to be roughly equivalent to a daily intake of 10 µg/day. | [15] International Programme on Chemical Safety. Environmental Health Criteria 182 Thallium. World Health Organization. 1996. | Based on two epidemiological studies involving thallium-exposed workers and persons living near an industrial source. No developmental neurotoxicity studies that could serve to guide a health protective risk assessment threshold for thallium in pregnant women, adults of reproductive age, or young children. |
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Sample Media | Number of Samples Collected | Range of Tl Found | Summary of Sample Locations |
---|---|---|---|
Surface soil * | 6 | ND (<0.11)–0.16 mg/kg | Children’s play area and various backyard locations, and family’s vacuum cleaner. |
Drinking water | 4 | ND (<0.001) mg/L | Family’s private well and purchased water the family uses for drinking. |
Indoor air | 7 | ND (<0.009) µg/m3 | Crawl space, attic, children’s bedrooms, living room, and kitchen. |
Surface dust (wipe) ** | 8 | ND (<0.013) mg/sample | HVAC filter, used mobile air filter, the children’s slide in the backyard play area, and floor vents in all bedrooms and living room. |
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Choudhury, A.; Fowles, J.; Bartlett, R.; Miller, M.D.; Durrani, T.; Harrison, R.; Barreau, T. Thallium Exposure Secondary to Commercial Kale Chip Consumption: California Case Highlights Opportunities for Improved Surveillance and Toxicological Understanding. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2025, 22, 1235. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph22081235
Choudhury A, Fowles J, Bartlett R, Miller MD, Durrani T, Harrison R, Barreau T. Thallium Exposure Secondary to Commercial Kale Chip Consumption: California Case Highlights Opportunities for Improved Surveillance and Toxicological Understanding. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2025; 22(8):1235. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph22081235
Chicago/Turabian StyleChoudhury, Asha, Jefferson Fowles, Russell Bartlett, Mark D. Miller, Timur Durrani, Robert Harrison, and Tracy Barreau. 2025. "Thallium Exposure Secondary to Commercial Kale Chip Consumption: California Case Highlights Opportunities for Improved Surveillance and Toxicological Understanding" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 22, no. 8: 1235. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph22081235
APA StyleChoudhury, A., Fowles, J., Bartlett, R., Miller, M. D., Durrani, T., Harrison, R., & Barreau, T. (2025). Thallium Exposure Secondary to Commercial Kale Chip Consumption: California Case Highlights Opportunities for Improved Surveillance and Toxicological Understanding. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 22(8), 1235. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph22081235