Abstract
Neither experimental animal exposures nor real-life human exposures are delivered at a constant level over a full lifetime. Although there are strong theoretical reasons why all pharmacokinetic processes must “go linear” at the limit of low dose rates, fluctuations in dose rate may produce nonlinearities that either increase or decrease actual risks relative to what would be expected for constant lifetime exposure. This paper discusses quantitative theory and specific examples for a number of processes that can be expected to give rise to pharmacokinetic nonlinearities at high dose rates–including transport processes (e.g., renal tubular secretion), activating and detoxifying metabolism, DNA repair, and enhancement of cell replication following gross toxicity in target tissues. At the extreme, full saturation of a detoxification or DNA repair process has the potential to create as much as a dose2 dependence of risk on dose delivered in a single burst, and if more than one detoxification step becomes fully saturated, this can be compounded. Effects via changes in cell replication rates, which appear likely to be largely responsible for the steep upward turning curve of formaldehyde carcinogenesis in rats, can be even more profound over a relatively narrow range of dosage. General suggestions are made for experimental methods to detect nonlinearities arising from the various sources in premarket screening programs.