4.7 Article Proceedings Paper

Environmental exposure to organochlorine pesticides and deficits in cochlear status in children

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH
Volume 22, Issue 19, Pages 14570-14578

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11356-015-4690-5

Keywords

Organochlorine pesticides; Polychlorinated biphenyls; Otoacoustic emissions; Hearing impairment; Infancy; Mixture effects

Funding

  1. EU 5th Framework Programme project Evaluating human health risk from low-dose and long-term PCB exposure [QLK4-CT-2000-00488]
  2. EU 7th Framework Programme FP7 [OBELIX 227391]
  3. US National Institutes of Health [R01 CA096525, R03 TW007152, P30 ES001247, K12 ES019852]
  4. project Center of Excellence of Environmental Health, ITMS from the European Regional Development Fund [26240120033]
  5. Slovak Research and Development Agency [APVT-21-016804, APVV-0571-12, APVV-0444-11]
  6. Environmental PCB exposure and hearing impairment [SK-IT-0040-08]
  7. Slovak-Italian Science and Technology Cooperation

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The aim of this study was to examine the hypothesis that organochlorine pesticides (OCPs), hexachlorobenzene (HCB), beta-hexachlorocyclohexane (beta-HCH), and 1,1,1-trichloro-2,2-bis(4-chlorophenyl)ethane (p,p'-DDT) and its metabolite 1,1-dichloro-2,2-bis(4-chlorophenyl)ethylene (p,p'-DDE) are ototoxic to humans. A multivariate general linear model was designed, in which the statistical relation between blood serum concentrations of HCB, beta-HCH, p,p'-DDT, or p,p'-DDE at different ages (at birth, 6, 16, and 45 months) and the distortion product otoacoustic emissions (DPOAEs) was treated as multivariate outcome variables. Polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) congeners and OCPs were strongly correlated in serum of children from our cohort. To ascertain that the association between DPOAEs at a given frequency and concentration of a pesticide is not influenced by PCBs or other OCP also present in serum, we calculated benchmark concentrations (BMCs) relating DPOAEs to a serum pesticide alone and in presence of confounding PCB-153 or other OCPs. We found that BMCs relating DPOAEs to serum pesticides are not affected by confounders. DPOAE amplitudes were associated with serum OCPs at all investigated time intervals, however, in a positive way with prenatal exposure and in a negative way with all postnatal exposures. We observed tonotopicity in the association of pesticides with amplitude of DPOAEs as its strength was frequency dependent. We conclude that exposure to OCPs in infancy at environmental concentrations may be associated with hearing deficits.

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