Several organic ingredients in personal care products (PCPs) became recently compounds of increasing environmental concern, being frequently detected mainly in receiving waters. However, there is limited understanding of how these emerging contaminants may affect wildlife communities, as well as humans. In particular, data on persistence, bioaccumulation and toxicity (PBT) are generally lacking and the environmental behavior of PCPs needs to be further investigated. The determination of all the dangerous properties is a long and difficult task, thus it is very important to have tools to quickly screen and highlight the most hazardous compounds, focusing the experiments only on the prioritized compounds. QSAR models can predict missing data ...