4.5 Article

Total Blood Mercury Predicts Methylmercury Exposure in Fish and Shellfish Consumers

Journal

BIOLOGICAL TRACE ELEMENT RESEARCH
Volume 200, Issue 8, Pages 3867-3875

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1007/s12011-021-02968-9

Keywords

Mercury; Methylmercury; Reproductive age; NHANES; Biomarkers; Seafood

Funding

  1. Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education (ORISE)
  2. US EPA Center for Public Health and Environmental Assessment
  3. US EPA's Center for Public Health and Environmental Assessment

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A study found that whole blood THg is a good predictor of MeHg exposure among fish and shellfish consumers, which is crucial for predicting exposure and establishing an exposure-response relationship.
Many studies evaluating methylmercury (MeHg) toxicity rely on whole blood total mercury (THg) measurements to estimate MeHg exposure. However, whole blood THg includes other forms of mercury (Hg), such as inorganic Hg, which have different exposure sources and toxicological effects than MeHg. Therefore, estimating the whole blood MeHg/THg ratio is critical to predicting MeHg exposure and, subsequently, efforts to establish an exposure-response relationship for use in risk assessment. A large, representative dataset (National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) 2011-2016) was used to determine the whole blood MeHg/THg ratio among (a) self-reported fish and shellfish consumers, >= 15 years of age (the full adult population (N = 5268 training dataset; N = 2336 test dataset)) and (b) female fish and shellfish consumers, 15-44 years of age (the women of reproductive age population (N = 1285 training dataset; N = 560 test dataset)). Unadjusted and adjusted linear and spline models with direct measurements for both THg and MeHg were evaluated. The mean whole blood MeHg/THg ratio was 0.75 (95% confidence interval (CI): 0.74, 0.75). This ratio was significantly higher among those with higher THg concentrations. All models exhibited excellent fit (adjusted R-2 from 0.957 to 0.982). Performance was slightly improved in spline versus linear models. For the full adult population and women of reproductive age, the unadjusted spline model predicted whole blood MeHg concentrations of 5.65 mu g/L and 5.55 mu g/L, respectively, when the THg concentration was 5.80 mu g/L. These results suggest that whole blood THg is a good predictor of whole blood MeHg among fish and shellfish consumers.

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