Reference : Biomonitoring of fast-elimination endocrine disruptors - Results from a 6-month follo...
Scientific journals : Article
Human health sciences : Pharmacy, pharmacology & toxicology
http://hdl.handle.net/10993/54728
Biomonitoring of fast-elimination endocrine disruptors - Results from a 6-month follow up on human volunteers with repeated urine and hair collection.
English
Fäys, François [> >]
Hardy, Emilie M. [> >]
Palazzi, Paul [> >]
Haan, Serge mailto [University of Luxembourg > Faculty of Science, Technology and Medicine (FSTM) > Department of Life Sciences and Medicine (DLSM)]
Beausoleil, Claire [> >]
Appenzeller, Brice [Luxembourg Institute of Health > Department of Population Health]
2021
The Science of the total environment
778
146330
Yes
International
0048-9697
1879-1026
Netherlands
[en] Biological Monitoring ; Endocrine Disruptors ; Environmental Exposure/analysis ; Follow-Up Studies ; Healthy Volunteers ; Humans ; Phthalic Acids ; Biomarkers of exposure ; Biomonitoring ; Endocrine disruptor ; Hair ; Urine
[en] BACKGROUND: The assessment of human exposure to fast-elimination endocrine disruptors (ED) such as phthalates, bisphenols or pesticides is usually based on urinary biomarkers. The variability of biomarkers concentration, due to rapid elimination from the body combined with frequent exposure is however pointed out as a major limitation to exposure assessment. Other matrices such as hair, less sensitive to short-term variations in the exposure, have been proposed as possible alternatives. Nevertheless, no study compared the information obtained from hair and urine respectively in a follow-up allowing to assess biomarkers variability over time in these two matrices, and to compare the correlation between them. METHODS: In the present study, hair and urine samples were collected from 16 volunteers over a 6 months follow-up. All in all, 92 hair samples and 805 urines samples were collected and analyzed for the presence of 16 phthalate metabolites, 4 bisphenols and 8 pesticides/metabolites. RESULTS: All the biomarkers analyzed were detected in at least one of the two matrices. 21 biomarkers were more frequently detected in hair, 6 in urine, and 1 was equivalent. Biomarkers intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC) ranged from 0.1 to 0.8 (ten above 0.4) in hair, and from 0.09 to 0.51 in urine (two above 0.4). The concentrations of biomarkers in hair and urine were significantly correlated for only one compound. CONCLUSION: This study highlights the complexity of assessing exposure to fast-elimination ED and suggests considering with caution the specificity of the matrix in data interpretation. The results document the respective advantages and limitations of urine and hair, and provide new insight in the understanding of the information provided by these biological matrices and their relevance for the assessment of human exposure to fast elimination contaminants. CAPSULE: 92 hair and 805 urine samples collected from 16 volunteers over 6 months, tested for phthalate metabolites, bisphenols and pesticides. 19 biomarkers (in hair) and 24 (in urine) were detected in >50% of the samples.
FNR (AFR16 11262468) / ANSES (French Agency for Food, Environmental and Occupational Health & Safety)
Researchers
http://hdl.handle.net/10993/54728
10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.146330
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
Copyright © 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
FnR ; FNR11262468 > Francois Noel Marcel Josepha Fays > NoStra-ED > Novel Strategies For The Assessment Of Exposure To Fast Elimination Endocrine Disruptors With Non-invasive Biological Sampling > 01/10/2016 > 30/09/2020 > 2016

File(s) associated to this reference

Fulltext file(s):

FileCommentaryVersionSizeAccess
Open access
Fays et al_Science of the total environment_2021_778_146330.pdfPublisher postprint2.25 MBView/Open

Bookmark and Share SFX Query

All documents in ORBilu are protected by a user license.