4.6 Article

The influence of demographic and lifestyle factors on urinary levels of PAH metabolites-empirical analyses of Cycle 2 (2009-2011) CHMS data

Journal

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41370-020-0208-4

Keywords

Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons; Biomonitoring; Personal exposure; Population based studies

Funding

  1. University of Ottawa
  2. CREATE-REACT program of the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
  3. Ontario Ministry of Labour
  4. Health Canada Intramural Funding

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Urinary concentrations of PAH metabolites are associated with smoking status, age, and sex, and are influenced by demographic factors in non-smokers such as age, sex, home age, and occupation. The unexplained variation in PAH metabolite levels is likely related to diet. The results can be used to identify remedial measures and design follow-up studies to test hypotheses related to exposure differences empirically.
Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) are a group of compounds formed during the incomplete combustion of organic matter. Several are mutagenic carcinogens; the magnitude of exposure can be assessed by examining urinary levels of PAH metabolites. Data from biomonitoring studies that record urinary PAH metabolite levels, as well as demographic and lifestyle information, can be used to investigate relationships between PAH exposure and variables, such as smoking status, workplace smoking restrictions, age, sex, household income, home age, and occupation. This study analysed creatinine-adjusted urinary PAH metabolite concentrations and questionnaire data from similar to 1200 individuals aged 16 years and older surveyed in Cycle 2 of the Canadian Health Measures Survey (CHMS). Statistical analyses revealed that smoking status, age, and sex are associated with urinary concentrations of a pyrene metabolite (1-OHP), phenanthrene metabolites (sigma OH-Phen), fluorene metabolites (sigma OH-Flu) and naphthalene metabolites (sigma OH-Nap). More specifically, smoking status, age and sex can collectively account for 30, 24, 52, and 34% of the observed variations in 1-OHP, sigma OH-Phen, sigma OH-Flu and sigma OH-Nap metabolites, respectively (p < 0.001). Analyses of non-smokers revealed weak but significant effects of age, sex, home age, and occupation on urinary levels of selected PAH metabolites (i.e., <7% of observed variation, p < 0.05). The unexplained variation in PAH metabolite levels is most likely related to diet, which was not examined. Although the results revealed significant relationships between urinary PAH metabolite levels and several lifestyle and/or demographic variables, robust examinations of selected effects (e.g., sex, home age, occupation) will require datasets that are balanced with respect to the other highlighted variables. The results can be used to identify remedial measures to reduce exposure and concomitant risk, and/or design follow-up studies to test hypotheses regarding the causes of exposure differences empirically related to sex, age, home age, and occupation.

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