volume 57 issue 20 pages 7645-7665

Quaternary Ammonium Compounds: A Chemical Class of Emerging Concern

Arlene Blum 2, 3
A Blum 2, 3
Jennifer Branyan 4
Thomas A Bruton 4
Carignan C 5
Gino Cortopassi 6
Sandipan Datta 6
Jamie Dewitt 7
Jamie C. DeWitt 7
Anne Cooper Doherty 4
Anne-Cooper Doherty 4
R U Halden 8
Homero Harari 9
Erica Hartmann 10
Terry C Hrubec 11
Shoba Iyer 12
Carol F Kwiatkowski 2, 13
Jonas LaPier 2
Dingsheng Li 14
Li Li 14
Jorge G Muñiz Ortiz 15
Amina Salamova 16
Ted Schettler 17
Ryan P Seguin 18
Anna Soehl 2
Rebecca Sutton 19
Libin Xu 18
Guomao Zheng 20
2
 
Green Science Policy Institute, Berkeley, California 94709, United States
4
 
California Department of Toxic Substances Control, Sacramento, California 95814, United States
11
 
Edward Via College of Osteopathic Medicine, Blacksburg, Virginia 24060, United States
12
 
California Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment, Oakland, California 94612, United States
15
 
US Public Health Service, Rockville, Maryland 20582, United States
17
 
Science and Environmental Health Network, Bolinas, California 94924, United States
19
 
San Francisco Estuary Institute, Richmond, California 94804, United States
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2023-05-09
scimago Q1
wos Q1
SJR3.690
CiteScore18.1
Impact factor11.3
ISSN0013936X, 15205851
General Chemistry
Environmental Chemistry
Abstract
Quaternary ammonium compounds (QACs), a large class of chemicals that includes high production volume substances, have been used for decades as antimicrobials, preservatives, and antistatic agents and for other functions in cleaning, disinfecting, personal care products, and durable consumer goods. QAC use has accelerated in response to the COVID-19 pandemic and the banning of 19 antimicrobials from several personal care products by the US Food and Drug Administration in 2016. Studies conducted before and after the onset of the pandemic indicate increased human exposure to QACs. Environmental releases of these chemicals have also increased. Emerging information on adverse environmental and human health impacts of QACs is motivating a reconsideration of the risks and benefits across the life cycle of their production, use, and disposal. This work presents a critical review of the literature and scientific perspective developed by a multidisciplinary, multi-institutional team of authors from academia, governmental, and nonprofit organizations. The review evaluates currently available information on the ecological and human health profile of QACs and identifies multiple areas of potential concern. Adverse ecological effects include acute and chronic toxicity to susceptible aquatic organisms, with concentrations of some QACs approaching levels of concern. Suspected or known adverse health outcomes include dermal and respiratory effects, developmental and reproductive toxicity, disruption of metabolic function such as lipid homeostasis, and impairment of mitochondrial function. QACs' role in antimicrobial resistance has also been demonstrated. In the US regulatory system, how a QAC is managed depends on how it is used, for example in pesticides or personal care products. This can result in the same QACs receiving different degrees of scrutiny depending on the use and the agency regulating it. Further, the US Environmental Protection Agency's current method of grouping QACs based on structure, first proposed in 1988, is insufficient to address the wide range of QAC chemistries, potential toxicities, and exposure scenarios. Consequently, exposures to common mixtures of QACs and from multiple sources remain largely unassessed. Some restrictions on the use of QACs have been implemented in the US and elsewhere, primarily focused on personal care products. Assessing the risks posed by QACs is hampered by their vast structural diversity and a lack of quantitative data on exposure and toxicity for the majority of these compounds. This review identifies important data gaps and provides research and policy recommendations for preserving the utility of QAC chemistries while also seeking to limit adverse environmental and human health effects.
Found 
Found 

Top-30

Journals

2
4
6
8
10
12
14
16
Journal of Hazardous Materials
15 publications, 6.02%
Environmental Science & Technology
13 publications, 5.22%
Science of the Total Environment
10 publications, 4.02%
Water Research
5 publications, 2.01%
ACS Omega
4 publications, 1.61%
Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety
4 publications, 1.61%
Cureus
4 publications, 1.61%
Journal of Environmental Chemical Engineering
4 publications, 1.61%
Toxics
3 publications, 1.2%
Environmental Science and Technology Letters
3 publications, 1.2%
ACS Sustainable Chemistry and Engineering
3 publications, 1.2%
Chemical Engineering Journal
3 publications, 1.2%
Molecules
3 publications, 1.2%
Advanced healthcare materials
3 publications, 1.2%
Journal of Water Process Engineering
2 publications, 0.8%
Chemosphere
2 publications, 0.8%
RSC Advances
2 publications, 0.8%
Environmental Science Advances
2 publications, 0.8%
Ultrasonics Sonochemistry
2 publications, 0.8%
Environmental International
2 publications, 0.8%
Environmental Research
2 publications, 0.8%
International Journal of Molecular Sciences
2 publications, 0.8%
bioRxiv
2 publications, 0.8%
Aquatic Toxicology
2 publications, 0.8%
ACS ES&T Water
2 publications, 0.8%
Toxicology
2 publications, 0.8%
Environmental Science: Water Research and Technology
2 publications, 0.8%
Environmental Chemistry and Ecotoxicology
2 publications, 0.8%
Nature Communications
2 publications, 0.8%
Macromolecular Rapid Communications
2 publications, 0.8%
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
16

Publishers

20
40
60
80
100
120
Elsevier
107 publications, 42.97%
American Chemical Society (ACS)
39 publications, 15.66%
Springer Nature
26 publications, 10.44%
MDPI
23 publications, 9.24%
Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
14 publications, 5.62%
Wiley
13 publications, 5.22%
Taylor & Francis
7 publications, 2.81%
Oxford University Press
5 publications, 2.01%
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
3 publications, 1.2%
Emerald
2 publications, 0.8%
Scientific Research Publishing
1 publication, 0.4%
Frontiers Media S.A.
1 publication, 0.4%
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
1 publication, 0.4%
The Endocrine Society
1 publication, 0.4%
IOP Publishing
1 publication, 0.4%
Pleiades Publishing
1 publication, 0.4%
Microbiology Society
1 publication, 0.4%
IMR Press
1 publication, 0.4%
Cambridge University Press
1 publication, 0.4%
Autonomous Non-profit Organization Editorial Board of the journal Uspekhi Khimii
1 publication, 0.4%
20
40
60
80
100
120
  • We do not take into account publications without a DOI.
  • Statistics recalculated weekly.

Are you a researcher?

Create a profile to get free access to personal recommendations for colleagues and new articles.
Metrics
251
Share
Cite this
GOST |
Cite this
GOST Copy
Arnold W. A. et al. Quaternary Ammonium Compounds: A Chemical Class of Emerging Concern // Environmental Science & Technology. 2023. Vol. 57. No. 20. pp. 7645-7665.
GOST all authors (up to 50) Copy
Arnold W. A., Blum A., Blum A., Branyan J., Bruton T. A., C C., Cortopassi G., Datta S., Dewitt J., DeWitt J. C., Doherty A. C., Doherty A., Halden R. U., Harari H., Hartmann E., Hrubec T. C., Iyer S., Kwiatkowski C. F., LaPier J., Li D., Li L., Muñiz Ortiz J. G., Salamova A., Schettler T., Seguin R. P., Soehl A., Sutton R., Xu L., Zheng G. Quaternary Ammonium Compounds: A Chemical Class of Emerging Concern // Environmental Science & Technology. 2023. Vol. 57. No. 20. pp. 7645-7665.
RIS |
Cite this
RIS Copy
TY - JOUR
DO - 10.1021/acs.est.2c08244
UR - https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acs.est.2c08244
TI - Quaternary Ammonium Compounds: A Chemical Class of Emerging Concern
T2 - Environmental Science & Technology
AU - Arnold, William A.
AU - Blum, Arlene
AU - Blum, A
AU - Branyan, Jennifer
AU - Bruton, Thomas A
AU - C, Carignan
AU - Cortopassi, Gino
AU - Datta, Sandipan
AU - Dewitt, Jamie
AU - DeWitt, Jamie C.
AU - Doherty, Anne Cooper
AU - Doherty, Anne-Cooper
AU - Halden, R U
AU - Harari, Homero
AU - Hartmann, Erica
AU - Hrubec, Terry C
AU - Iyer, Shoba
AU - Kwiatkowski, Carol F
AU - LaPier, Jonas
AU - Li, Dingsheng
AU - Li, Li
AU - Muñiz Ortiz, Jorge G
AU - Salamova, Amina
AU - Schettler, Ted
AU - Seguin, Ryan P
AU - Soehl, Anna
AU - Sutton, Rebecca
AU - Xu, Libin
AU - Zheng, Guomao
PY - 2023
DA - 2023/05/09
PB - American Chemical Society (ACS)
SP - 7645-7665
IS - 20
VL - 57
PMID - 37157132
SN - 0013-936X
SN - 1520-5851
ER -
BibTex |
Cite this
BibTex (up to 50 authors) Copy
@article{2023_Arnold,
author = {William A. Arnold and Arlene Blum and A Blum and Jennifer Branyan and Thomas A Bruton and Carignan C and Gino Cortopassi and Sandipan Datta and Jamie Dewitt and Jamie C. DeWitt and Anne Cooper Doherty and Anne-Cooper Doherty and R U Halden and Homero Harari and Erica Hartmann and Terry C Hrubec and Shoba Iyer and Carol F Kwiatkowski and Jonas LaPier and Dingsheng Li and Li Li and Jorge G Muñiz Ortiz and Amina Salamova and Ted Schettler and Ryan P Seguin and Anna Soehl and Rebecca Sutton and Libin Xu and Guomao Zheng},
title = {Quaternary Ammonium Compounds: A Chemical Class of Emerging Concern},
journal = {Environmental Science & Technology},
year = {2023},
volume = {57},
publisher = {American Chemical Society (ACS)},
month = {may},
url = {https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acs.est.2c08244},
number = {20},
pages = {7645--7665},
doi = {10.1021/acs.est.2c08244}
}
MLA
Cite this
MLA Copy
Arnold, William A., et al. “Quaternary Ammonium Compounds: A Chemical Class of Emerging Concern.” Environmental Science & Technology, vol. 57, no. 20, May. 2023, pp. 7645-7665. https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acs.est.2c08244.
Profiles