Boxer Elizabeth, Zhong Yilin, Levasseur Jessica, Stapleton Heather M, Hoffman Kate
Nicholas School of the Environment, Duke University, Durham, NC, USA.
J Expo Sci Environ Epidemiol. 2025 Feb 15. doi: 10.1038/s41370-025-00756-4.
Parabens are widely used as antimicrobials in personal care products and pharmaceuticals. While previous studies demonstrate paraben exposure is ubiquitous, data investigating infants' exposure is limited.
We sought to characterize infants' exposure to parabens and identify factors associated with higher levels of exposure.
Families enrolled in the CHildren's Immune ResPonse Study between 2016-2018. Parents completed questionnaires, providing information on demographics and lifestyle factors. Urine samples were collected when infants were 1 to 3 months old (n = 71) and 12 months old (n = 29), with 18 infants evaluated at both ages. Parabens were measured in urine samples using liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry and served as an indicator of exposure.
Methylparaben (MP), ethylparaben (EP), and propylparaben (PP) were detected in >70% of urine samples, and concentrations ranged several orders of magnitude (specific-gravity-corrected medians: MP = 25.4 PP = 3.55; EP = 0.90 ng/mL). Butylparaben was detected less frequently (<50%). Paraben concentrations were lower than those reported for older children and adults; however, we did not find statistically significant differences in paraben concentrations by infant age. Correlations between measurements taken over time were poor, suggesting paraben exposure is variable, and multiple measurements are needed to capture cumulative exposure information. We observed differences in exposure by race/ethnicity and socioeconomic status; non-White infants and infants whose parents completed less education had higher paraben exposure. Recent lotion usage strongly predicted paraben exposure in 1-3-month-olds. For example, infants using lotion in the past seven days had urinary MP concentrations 355% higher than infants without lotion usage (e = 4.55, 95% Confidence Interval = 1.68, 12.55, p < 0.001). Together, our results suggest infants are ubiquitously exposed to parabens and personal care product use may be an important source of exposure.
To the best of our knowledge, this is the first paper to report paraben levels and evaluate predictors of exposure in infants. This study supports the hypothesis that universal exposure to parabens extends to infants, as indicated by urinary biomarker concentrations. Of the predictors evaluated, lotion use in the last seven days was the strongest predictor of exposure in 1-3-month-olds. Given infant paraben levels are strongly correlated to lotion use, there may be an opportunity for parents to reduce paraben exposure by limiting its application or consulting ingredient labels to ensure no parabens are present.
对羟基苯甲酸酯类作为抗菌剂广泛应用于个人护理产品和药品中。尽管先前的研究表明对羟基苯甲酸酯类暴露普遍存在,但关于婴儿暴露情况的调查数据有限。
我们试图描述婴儿对羟基苯甲酸酯类的暴露情况,并确定与较高暴露水平相关的因素。
2016年至2018年期间参加儿童免疫反应研究的家庭。父母完成问卷调查,提供人口统计学和生活方式因素方面的信息。在婴儿1至3个月大时(n = 71)和12个月大时(n = 29)采集尿液样本,其中18名婴儿在两个年龄段均接受了评估。使用液相色谱串联质谱法测量尿液样本中的对羟基苯甲酸酯类,作为暴露的指标。
在超过70%的尿液样本中检测到了甲基对羟基苯甲酸酯(MP)、乙基对羟基苯甲酸酯(EP)和丙基对羟基苯甲酸酯(PP),其浓度范围相差几个数量级(经比重校正的中位数:MP = 25.4;PP = 3.55;EP = 0.90 ng/mL)。丁基对羟基苯甲酸酯的检测频率较低(<50%)。对羟基苯甲酸酯类的浓度低于 older children and adults;然而,我们没有发现婴儿年龄与对羟基苯甲酸酯类浓度之间存在统计学上的显著差异。随时间进行的测量之间的相关性较差,这表明对羟基苯甲酸酯类暴露是可变的,需要多次测量来获取累积暴露信息。我们观察到种族/民族和社会经济地位在暴露方面存在差异;非白人婴儿以及父母受教育程度较低的婴儿对羟基苯甲酸酯类暴露水平较高。近期使用乳液强烈预示着1至3个月大婴儿的对羟基苯甲酸酯类暴露情况。例如,在过去七天内使用乳液的婴儿尿液中MP浓度比未使用乳液的婴儿高355%(e = 4.55,95%置信区间 = 1.68,12.55,p < 0.001)。总之,我们的结果表明婴儿普遍暴露于对羟基苯甲酸酯类,使用个人护理产品可能是一个重要的暴露源。
据我们所知,这是第一篇报告婴儿对羟基苯甲酸酯类水平并评估暴露预测因素的论文。这项研究支持了这样的假设,即尿液生物标志物浓度表明对羟基苯甲酸酯类的普遍暴露也延伸至婴儿。在所评估的预测因素中,过去七天内使用乳液是1至3个月大婴儿暴露的最强预测因素。鉴于婴儿对羟基苯甲酸酯类水平与乳液使用密切相关,父母可能有机会通过限制其使用或查看成分标签以确保不含对羟基苯甲酸酯类来减少对羟基苯甲酸酯类暴露。