The Risk Associated Intake (RAI) is the maximum amount of a substance that if ingested daily for a lifetime, is expected to result in the risk of one additional case of human cancer in a population of one million. Where more than one carcinogenic chemical is present, the RAI must be based on an allowed additive risk of one additional case of cancer in a population of one hundred thousand. The RAI must be derived as specified in subsections (a) through (c).
RAI = K/CPF
Where:
RAI | = | Risk associated intake in milligrams per day (mg/d); |
K | = | A constant consisting of the product of the average weight of an adult human, assumed to be 70 kg, and the allowed cancer risk level of one in one million (1/1,000,000); and |
CPF | = | Carcinogenic Potency Factor is the risk of one additional cancer per unit dose from exposure. The CPF is expressed in units of inverse milligrams per kilogram - day (l/mg/kg-d) as derived in subsections (b)(1) through (b)(7). |
Ill. Admin. Code tit. 35, § 302.654
Added at 14 Ill. Reg. 2899, effective February 13, 1990