Tran Nga L, Barraj Leila, Smith Kim, Javier Annabelle, Burke Thomas A
Exponent, Washington, DC 20036, USA.
Risk Anal. 2004 Feb;24(1):19-30. doi: 10.1111/j.0272-4332.2004.00408.x.
Twenty-four-hour recall data from the Continuing Survey of Food Intake by Individuals (CSFII) are frequently used to estimate dietary exposure for risk assessment. Food frequency questionnaires are traditional instruments of epidemiological research; however, their application in dietary exposure and risk assessment has been limited. This article presents a probabilistic method of bridging the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) food frequency and the CSFII data to estimate longitudinal (usual) intake, using a case study of seafood mercury exposures for two population subgroups (females 16 to 49 years and children 1 to 5 years). Two hundred forty-nine CSFII food codes were mapped into 28 NHANES fish/shellfish categories. FDA and state/local seafood mercury data were used. A uniform distribution with minimum and maximum blood-diet ratios of 0.66 to 1.07 was assumed. A probabilistic assessment was conducted to estimate distributions of individual 30-day average daily fish/shellfish intakes, methyl mercury exposure, and blood levels. The upper percentile estimates of fish and shellfish intakes based on the 30-day daily averages were lower than those based on two- and three-day daily averages. These results support previous findings that distributions of "usual" intakes based on a small number of consumption days provide overestimates in the upper percentiles. About 10% of the females (16 to 49 years) and children (1 to 5 years) may be exposed to mercury levels above the EPA's RfD. The predicted 75th and 90th percentile blood mercury levels for the females in the 16-to-49-year group were similar to those reported by NHANES. The predicted 90th percentile blood mercury levels for children in the 1-to-5-year subgroup was similar to NHANES and the 75th percentile estimates were slightly above the NHANES.
来自个人食物摄入量持续调查(CSFII)的24小时回顾性数据常被用于估算饮食暴露量以进行风险评估。食物频率问卷是流行病学研究的传统工具;然而,它们在饮食暴露和风险评估中的应用一直有限。本文提出了一种概率方法,通过对两个亚人群组(16至49岁女性和1至5岁儿童)的海鲜汞暴露案例研究,将国家健康与营养检查调查(NHANES)食物频率数据与CSFII数据相结合,以估算纵向(通常)摄入量。249个CSFII食物代码被映射到28个NHANES鱼类/贝类类别中。使用了美国食品药品监督管理局(FDA)以及州/地方的海鲜汞数据。假设血液-饮食比率的最小值和最大值分别为0.66至1.07,呈均匀分布。进行了概率评估,以估算个体30天平均每日鱼类/贝类摄入量、甲基汞暴露量和血液水平的分布。基于30天每日平均值的鱼类和贝类摄入量的较高百分位数估计值低于基于两天和三天每日平均值的估计值。这些结果支持了先前的研究发现,即基于少量食用天数的“通常”摄入量分布在较高百分位数处会高估摄入量。约10%的16至49岁女性和1至5岁儿童可能接触到高于美国环境保护局(EPA)参考剂量(RfD)的汞水平。16至4�岁组女性预测的第75和第90百分位数血液汞水平与NHANES报告的水平相似。1至5岁亚组儿童预测的第90百分位数血液汞水平与NHANES相似,第75百分位数估计值略高于NHANES。