Baker Brennan H, Day Drew B, Hazlehurst Marnie F, Herkert Nicholas J, Stapleton Heather M, Sathyanarayana Sheela
University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA; Seattle Children's Research Institute, Seattle, WA, USA.
Seattle Children's Research Institute, Seattle, WA, USA.
Environ Res. 2024 Dec 1;262(Pt 1):119776. doi: 10.1016/j.envres.2024.119776. Epub 2024 Aug 13.
Although human biomonitoring of environmental chemicals has been considered a gold standard, these methods can be costly, burdensome, and prone to unwanted sources of variability that may cause confounding. Silicone wristbands have recently emerged as innovative passive samplers for measuring personal exposures.
In a pilot study from 2019 to 2021 involving 55 children aged 5-9 years in Seattle and Yakima, Washington, we utilized silicone wristbands to explore associations of sociodemographic variables and COVID-19-related restrictions, including school closures, with exposures to numerous chemicals including brominated and organophosphate ester (OPE) flame retardants, polychlorinated biphenyls, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), phthalates, and pesticides. We additionally conducted the first analysis testing silicone wristband chemicals as predictors of child wheeze, individually and in mixtures via logistic weighted quantile sum regression (WQS).
Among 109 semi-volatile organic compounds measured, we detected 40 in >60% of wristbands worn by children continuously for an average of 5 days. Chemicals were generally positively correlated, especially within the same class. Male sex and increasing age were linked with higher exposures across several chemical classes; Hispanic/Latino ethnicity was linked with higher exposures to some phthalates and OPEs. COVID-19 restrictions were associated with lower wristband concentrations of brominated and triaryl OPE flame retardants. Each one-decile higher WQS exposure index was suggestively associated with 2.11-fold [95% CI: 0.93-4.80] higher odds of child wheeze. Risk of child wheeze was higher per 10-fold increase in the PAH chrysene (RR = 1.93[1.07-3.49]), the pesticide cis-permethrin (3.31[1.23-8.91]), and di-isononyl phthalate (DINP) (5.40[1.22-24.0]) CONCLUSIONS: Our identification of demographic factors including sex, age, and ethnicity associated with chemical exposures may aid efforts to mitigate exposure disparities. Lower exposures to flame retardants during pandemic restrictions corroborates prior evidence of higher levels of these chemicals in school versus home environments. Future research in larger cohorts is needed to validate these findings.
尽管人体对环境化学物质的生物监测被视为金标准,但这些方法可能成本高昂、负担沉重,且容易受到可能导致混杂的不必要变异来源的影响。硅胶腕带最近已成为用于测量个人暴露的创新型被动采样器。
在2019年至2021年的一项试点研究中,我们对华盛顿州西雅图和亚基马的55名5至9岁儿童进行了研究,利用硅胶腕带探讨社会人口统计学变量以及与新冠疫情相关的限制措施(包括学校关闭)与多种化学物质暴露之间的关联,这些化学物质包括溴化和有机磷酸酯(OPE)阻燃剂、多氯联苯、多环芳烃(PAH)、邻苯二甲酸盐和农药。我们还首次进行了分析,通过逻辑加权分位数和回归(WQS)单独以及混合测试硅胶腕带中的化学物质作为儿童喘息预测指标的情况。
在测量的109种半挥发性有机化合物中,我们在平均连续佩戴5天的儿童腕带中检测到其中40种化合物的比例超过60%。化学物质之间通常呈正相关,尤其是在同一类别中。男性和年龄增长与多种化学物质类别的较高暴露有关;西班牙裔/拉丁裔与某些邻苯二甲酸盐和OPEs的较高暴露有关。新冠疫情限制措施与腕带中溴化和三芳基OPE阻燃剂的较低浓度有关。每增加一个十分位数的WQS暴露指数,儿童喘息的几率就暗示性地增加2.11倍[95%置信区间:0.93 - 4.80]。每增加10倍的PAH屈(RR = 1.93[1.07 - 3.49])、农药顺式氯菊酯(3.31[1.23 - 8.91])和邻苯二甲酸二异壬酯(DINP)(5.40[1.22 - 24.0]),儿童喘息的风险就更高。
我们对与化学物质暴露相关的人口统计学因素(包括性别、年龄和种族)的识别可能有助于努力减轻暴露差异。疫情限制期间阻燃剂暴露较低,这证实了先前关于学校环境中这些化学物质水平高于家庭环境的证据。需要在更大的队列中进行进一步研究以验证这些发现。