Patel Opal P, Lawrence Kaitlyn G, Parks Christine G, Stewart Patricia A, Stenzel Mark R, Groth Caroline P, Ramachandran Gurumurthy, Banerjee Sudipto, Huynh Tran B, Jackson Braxton, Sandler Dale P, Engel Lawrence S
Department of Epidemiology, UNC Gillings School of Public Health, Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
Epidemiology Branch, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, National Institutes of Health, Research Triangle Park, NC, USA.
J Expo Sci Environ Epidemiol. 2024 Dec 28. doi: 10.1038/s41370-024-00738-y.
Despite evidence from experimental studies linking some petroleum hydrocarbons to markers of immune suppression, limited epidemiologic research exists on this topic.
The aim of this cross-sectional study was to examine associations of oil spill related chemicals (benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, xylene, and n-hexane (BTEX-H)) and total hydrocarbons (THC) with immune-related illnesses as indicators of potential immune suppression.
Subjects comprised 8601 Deepwater Horizon (DWH) oil spill clean-up and response workers who participated in a home visit (1-3 years after the DWH spill) in the Gulf Long-term Follow-up (GuLF) Study. Cumulative exposures to THC and individual BTEX-H constituents during the oil spill clean-up were estimated using a job-exposure matrix linking air measurement data to detailed participant work histories. Study outcomes included post-spill occurrence and/or frequency of illnesses ascertained at the home visit, including colds, flu, cold sores, pneumonia, and shingles. Frequent cold and frequent flu were defined as ≥4 colds and ≥2 episodes of flu since the spill, respectively. We examined an aggregate outcome of frequent colds, any flu, cold sores, or pneumonia since the spill. In single pollutant models, we used multivariable log-binomial regression to estimate prevalence ratios (PR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) for associations between quartiles of THC and BTEX-H exposures with each outcome. We used quantile g-computation to estimate the joint effect of the BTEX-H mixture.
We observed positive associations of increasing quartiles of THC and BTEX-H with all outcomes except shingles, with evidence of an exposure-response for most outcomes. Strongest associations were observed for frequent flu (range of PR: 1.41-1.67). The BTEX-H mixture was associated with small to modest elevations in PRs for most outcomes.
This study is the first to our knowledge to demonstrate an association between oil spill BTEX-H exposures and multiple immune-related illnesses as measures of potential immune suppression. Increasing oil spill-related volatile hydrocarbon exposures may increase the risk of multiple immune-related illnesses, especially frequent cold and frequent flu. Future research on this topic using more robust measures of immune function would advance existing evidence on this relationship.
尽管实验研究表明某些石油碳氢化合物与免疫抑制标志物之间存在关联,但关于这一主题的流行病学研究却很有限。
这项横断面研究的目的是检验与漏油相关的化学物质(苯、甲苯、乙苯、二甲苯和正己烷(BTEX-H))以及总碳氢化合物(THC)与免疫相关疾病之间的关联,以此作为潜在免疫抑制的指标。
研究对象包括8601名参与墨西哥湾长期随访(GuLF)研究的深水地平线(DWH)漏油清理及应对工作人员,他们在漏油事件发生1至3年后接受了家访。通过将空气测量数据与详细的参与者工作经历相联系的工作暴露矩阵,估算了漏油清理期间THC和各BTEX-H成分的累积暴露量。研究结果包括在家访中确定的漏油后疾病的发生情况和/或频率,包括感冒、流感、唇疱疹、肺炎和带状疱疹。频繁感冒和频繁流感分别定义为自漏油事件以来感冒次数≥4次和流感发作次数≥2次。我们研究了自漏油事件以来频繁感冒、任何流感、唇疱疹或肺炎的综合结果。在单污染物模型中,我们使用多变量对数二项回归来估计THC和BTEX-H暴露四分位数与各结果之间关联的患病率比(PR)和95%置信区间(CI)。我们使用分位数g计算来估计BTEX-H混合物的联合效应。
我们观察到THC和BTEX-H四分位数增加与除带状疱疹外的所有结果呈正相关,大多数结果有暴露-反应证据。频繁流感的关联最强(PR范围:1.41 - 1.67)。BTEX-H混合物与大多数结果的PR小幅至适度升高有关。
据我们所知,本研究首次证明漏油事件中BTEX-H暴露与多种免疫相关疾病之间存在关联,以此作为潜在免疫抑制的指标。与漏油相关的挥发性碳氢化合物暴露增加可能会增加多种免疫相关疾病的风险,尤其是频繁感冒和频繁流感。未来使用更可靠的免疫功能测量方法对该主题的研究将推进关于这种关系的现有证据。