Continental Reference Point: Harmonized Human Biomonitoring across Europe
نویسنده
چکیده
The Consortium to Perform Human Biomonitoring on a European Scale (COPHES) was launched to collect population-representative data on environmental exposures for the European Union (EU) as a whole. In this issue of EHP, investigators describe results from DEMOCOPHES, the demonstration project that proved the feasibility of a harmonized approach across 17 EU nations. “We have shown that working together on a common protocol allows us to obtain comparable results on an EU-wide level,” says lead author Greet Schoeters, program manager of environ ment and health at VITO, the Flemish Institute for Technological Research. This type of human biomonitoring can be used to track exposure trends and potential impacts of environmental regulations. For example, ongoing biomonitoring by the German Environmental Survey (GerES) suggests that a 1992 recommendation against the use of amalgam fillings in children and women of child-bearing age may have contributed to decreasing urinary mercury levels in that country’s population. For the current study, researchers analyzed hair and urine samples from 1,844 mother–child pairs recruited from 17 countries. Half the participants lived in rural areas, and half lived in urban areas. All were healthy with no known metabolic disturbances. Samples yielded information on exposures to mercury, cadmium, nicotine, and several phthalates found in personal care products and food packaging. To help ensure validity and transferability of results, researchers developed harmonized protocols and quality controls for chemical and data analyses. As with the U.S. National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, exposures were associated with known lifestyle and diet predictors, and biomarkers for children closely matched those of their mothers. “This overall pattern provides confidence that the effort to validly collect and analyze these samples and companion exposure information was successful,” says Lesa Aylward, a toxicologist at Summit Toxicology LLP, who was not involved with the study. The vast majority of biomarker concentrations were below healthbased guidance values set by the Joint FAO/WHO Expert Committee on Food Additives (JECFA) and the German Human Biomonitoring Commission, as well as published values from independent scientists. Eastern, southern, and (to a lesser extent) western European countries clustered together based on similar biomarker patterns, differences that Schoeters says are probably related to lifestyle factors, environmental conditions, and possibly regulation. Levels of metabolites of di(2-ethylhexyl) phthalate (DEHP) indicated ubiquitous exposure to this compound even though its use is restricted in the EU. Regular consumption of chewing gum and ice cream was associated with higher average concentrations of multiple phthalate metabolites among children and mothers. These treats “may serve as a proxy for other factors, such as levels of processed food in the diet,” says Schoeters. For monoisobutyl phthalate, average European values in both mothers and children were 3–4 times higher than those observed in the United States. Compared with the United States, Europeans on average had lower biomarker concentrations of monobenzyl phthalate and monoethyl phthalate, and higher concentrations of mono-n-butyl phthalate and DEHP metabolites, but these differences were less dramatic. Hair mercury concentrations increased with reported consumption of fish and shellfish. Concentrations were 35% higher for children and 30% for mothers living in urban areas, the only result in this study that showed differences between residents of urban and rural areas. Hair mercury was highest among children living in Spain and Portugal, whose average concentrations were 6 and 7 times higher, respectively, than the European average. The proportion of participants whose mercury levels exceeded the JECFA/WHO provisional threshold value differed considerably by country, with no participants exceeding the threshold in most northern and central European countries and up to 33% of mothers exceeding the threshold in countries with high fish consumption. Concentrations of cotinine (a metabolite of nicotine) varied widely by country, with levels lowest in countries with the strongest anti-smoking legislation. Smoking was also associated with increased cadmium levels, which were 30% higher among mothers who smoked. Smoking is an important source of cadmium exposure because tobacco plants preferentially accumulate cadmium from the soil. “The study is a step towards European reference values,” says coauthor Ludwine Casteleyn, a researcher at the University of Leuven Center for Human Genetics in Belgium. “Currently European countries, together with the European Commission, are exploring the possibilities for a more sustainable system that should be able to support environmental health policy, at a European and a national level.”
منابع مشابه
First Steps toward Harmonized Human Biomonitoring in Europe: Demonstration Project to Perform Human Biomonitoring on a European Scale
BACKGROUND For Europe as a whole, data on internal exposure to environmental chemicals do not yet exist. Characterization of the internal individual chemical environment is expected to enhance understanding of the environmental threats to health. OBJECTIVES We developed and applied a harmonized protocol to collect comparable human biomonitoring data all over Europe. METHODS In 17 European c...
متن کاملTracking pan-continental trends in environmental contamination using sentinel raptors—what types of samples should we use?
Biomonitoring using birds of prey as sentinel species has been mooted as a way to evaluate the success of European Union directives that are designed to protect people and the environment across Europe from industrial contaminants and pesticides. No such pan-European evaluation currently exists. Coordination of such large scale monitoring would require harmonisation across multiple countries of...
متن کاملThe development of the MeDALL Core Questionnaires for a harmonized follow-up assessment of eleven European birth cohorts on asthma and allergies.
BACKGROUND Numerous birth cohorts have been initiated in the world over the past 30 years using heterogeneous methods to assess the incidence, course and risk factors of asthma and allergies. The aim of the present work is to provide the stepwise proceedings of the development and current version of the harmonized MeDALL-Core Questionnaire (MeDALL-CQ) used prospectively in 11 European birth coh...
متن کاملEurope, Continental Philosophy and the Philosophy of Education
On what might a comparative discussion of philosophy of education that takes Europe as one of its terms be based? This paper begins by addressing the complexity that attaches to the name ‘Europe’ in this context in order to lay the way for a more detailed consideration of so-called ‘Continental’ philosophy—specifically of poststructuralism. It makes reference to the ways in which the work of po...
متن کاملDevelopment of Screening Tools for the Interpretation of Chemical Biomonitoring Data
Evaluation of a larger number of chemicals in commerce from the perspective of potential human health risk has become a focus of attention in North America and Europe. Screening-level chemical risk assessment evaluations consider both exposure and hazard. Exposures are increasingly being evaluated through biomonitoring studies in humans. Interpreting human biomonitoring results requires compari...
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
عنوان ژورنال:
دوره 123 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2015