The Integrated Risk Information System (IRIS) is an environmental assessment program operated by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). The IRIS program is focused on risk assessment, and not risk management (those decision processes involving analysis of regulatory, legal, social and economic considerations related to the risks being studied).[1]
Initially, in the 1980s, the IRIS program established a database of human health assessments about the impacts of chemicals in the environment. EPA created the database to provide a consistent approach to risk assessment practices across the various environmental laws that the Agency implemented and enforced.
The program was created by the EPA in 1985. Initially, the goal of the program was to foster consistency's in the agency's evaluation of chemical toxicity.[1] The IRIS database was first made publicly available in 1987. In 1996, the EPA implemented a new process for building intra-agency consensus and improving efficiency within the IRIS database. The same year, the EPA introduced the IRIS Toxicological Review, which presented the first agency-wide health assessment document. In March 1997, the IRIS database was uploaded to the internet. In 2004, the IRIS process was changed to add an interagency review led by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) and to place a higher emphasis on outside peer review of IRIS assessments.
The IRIS program was once again revised in April 2008. Among other things, the newly revised program provided opportunity for research to close data gaps on mission critical chemicals. The following year, the process was changed to streamline a review schedule so that a majority of assessments would be posted to the IRIS database within two years of the start date. In 2013, the EPA announced that it would be making enhancements to the IRIS process in order to improve transparency, efficiency, and the scientific foundation of the agency's assessments.[2] That same year, the program's Toxicological Review documents were restructured to make them more clear, systematic and consistent. In December 2015, the IRIS program released its first ever multi-year agenda, which identified the top chemical assessments the program would focus on in the following years.
In 2016 the EPA faced criticism for changing the risk description of Ethylene Oxide from "probably carcinogenic to humans" to "carcinogenic to humans," based on Ethylene Oxide's IRIS value. The American Chemistry Council found shortly after that the EPA had grossly misestimated the IRIS value, finding it to be 19,000 times lower than natural levels of EO in the human body, and comparably lower than the levels of EO in ambient air.[3] Consequently, in 2017 the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TECQ) performed its own analysis of the cancer risk proposed by EO and found it initially to be 65 times lower than the IRIS value, before releasing a later assessment with a value 3,500 times lower in 2019.[4] In 2022, despite calls to review the IRIS value or to adopt the TECQ risk value, the EPA elected to continue to use the 2016 IRIS value and decline the TECQ proposed value.[5]
The IRIS process takes about 26 to 39 months to complete, depending on the complexity of the assessment, with the review part of the process taking between 15 and 24 months.[6] The process begins with what the EPA refers to as the "Planning and Scoping" stage.[7] During this stage, risk assessors will consider the scope and possible legal limitations as well as how the information will be used. After the Planning and Scoping Stage, the EPA uses a seven-step risk assessment review program that starts with a draft assessment and ends in publication on an IRIS website. The review process proceeds as follows:
The IRIS opens a draft review for experts to review in order to assess the course of action needed for the corresponding issue. Action is taken by legislative bodies after assessing the risk and the level of action needed to be taken for the corresponding issue. The relationship between IRIS and an environmental impact assessment (EIA) is that IRIS provides a database used in the EIA process. External parties (scientists, scholars, legislation) make decisions based on the IRIS database. Support for these decisions comes from backing from programs such as Strategic environmental assessment (SEA) and OMB.