4.8 Article

A mass-balance approach to evaluate arsenic intake and excretion in different populations

Journal

ENVIRONMENT INTERNATIONAL
Volume 166, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envint.2022.107371

Keywords

Arsenic; Wellwater; Urine; Sourcesofexposure

Funding

  1. University of California Berkeley [P42ES004705]
  2. University of New Mexico [P42ES025589]
  3. Columbia University [P42ES010349]

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This article presents a mass-balance approach to assess misclassification of arsenic exposure. Simulating the relationships between arsenic intake and excretion helps to evaluate exposure sources more accurately and identify common causes of misclassification.
Unless a toxicant builds up in a deep compartment, intake by the human body must on average balance the amount that is lost. We apply this idea to assess arsenic (As) exposure misclassification in three previously studied populations in rural Bangladesh (n = 11,224), Navajo Nation in the Southwestern United States (n = 619), and northern Chile (n = 630), under varying assumptions about As sources. Relationships between As intake and excretion were simulated by taking into account additional sources, as well as variability in urine dilution inferred from urinary creatinine. The simulations bring As intake closer to As excretion but also indicate that some exposure misclassification remains. In rural Bangladesh, accounting for intake from more than one well and rice improved the alignment of intake and excretion, especially at low exposure. In Navajo Nation, comparing intake and excretion revealed home dust as an important source. Finally, in northern Chile, while food-frequency questionnaires and urinary As speciation indicate fish and shellfish sources, persistent imbalance of intake and excretion suggests imprecise measures of drinking water arsenic as a major cause of exposure misclassification. The mass-balance approach could prove to be useful for evaluating sources of exposure to toxicants in other settings.

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