TY - JOUR
T1 - Distribution of blood concentrations of persistent organic pollutants in a representative sample of the population of Barcelona in 2006, and comparison with levels in 2002
AU - Porta, Miquel
AU - López, Tomàs
AU - Gasull, Magda
AU - Rodríguez-Sanz, Maica
AU - Garí, Mercè
AU - Pumarega, José
AU - Borrell, Carme
AU - Grimalt, Joan O.
PY - 2012/4/15
Y1 - 2012/4/15
N2 - Introduction: POP biomonitoring programs are useful for exposure assessment, to analyze patterns, and to evaluate policies. However, population-representative surveys are scarce and heterogeneous. Reports on time trends in representative samples using the same methods are rare. Objectives: To analyze the distribution of serum concentrations of 19 POPs in the general population of Barcelona city in 2006, and to compare it with the distribution in 2002. Methods: 231 participants in the Barcelona Health Survey were interviewed face-to-face, gave blood, and underwent a physical exam. Density plots ("POP Geoffrey Rose curves") were used to represent the full population distribution of each compound. Results: Eight POPs were each detected in > 80% of the study subjects: p,. p'-DDT, p,. p'-DDE, PCB congeners 118, 138, 153 and 180, HCB and β-HCH. The minimum number of POPs detected in one person was 5, and 72% of the population accumulated ≥ 10 compounds. p,. p'-DDE and HCB showed the highest concentrations (median = 219 and 109. ng/g lipid, respectively). Concentrations decreased by 34-56% from 2002 to 2006. The decrease was similar in women and men, and in all age groups/birth cohorts. It was larger with increasing BMI; for p,. p'-DDT, HCB and β-HCH the decrease in obese individuals was 31-44 percentage points larger than in subjects with normal weight. The distribution of POP concentrations was always switched towards higher values in women than men. POP levels also differed significantly by age, body mass index, weight gain, birth place and social class, but not by parity and breastfeeding. The two younger cohorts had a higher DDT/DDE ratio than the oldest cohort. Conclusion: Although human POP contamination remains common in the city of Barcelona, concentrations decreased significantly in 4. years. Our approach suggests innovative ways to conceive, analyze and present results for other monitoring programs. © 2012 Elsevier B.V.
AB - Introduction: POP biomonitoring programs are useful for exposure assessment, to analyze patterns, and to evaluate policies. However, population-representative surveys are scarce and heterogeneous. Reports on time trends in representative samples using the same methods are rare. Objectives: To analyze the distribution of serum concentrations of 19 POPs in the general population of Barcelona city in 2006, and to compare it with the distribution in 2002. Methods: 231 participants in the Barcelona Health Survey were interviewed face-to-face, gave blood, and underwent a physical exam. Density plots ("POP Geoffrey Rose curves") were used to represent the full population distribution of each compound. Results: Eight POPs were each detected in > 80% of the study subjects: p,. p'-DDT, p,. p'-DDE, PCB congeners 118, 138, 153 and 180, HCB and β-HCH. The minimum number of POPs detected in one person was 5, and 72% of the population accumulated ≥ 10 compounds. p,. p'-DDE and HCB showed the highest concentrations (median = 219 and 109. ng/g lipid, respectively). Concentrations decreased by 34-56% from 2002 to 2006. The decrease was similar in women and men, and in all age groups/birth cohorts. It was larger with increasing BMI; for p,. p'-DDT, HCB and β-HCH the decrease in obese individuals was 31-44 percentage points larger than in subjects with normal weight. The distribution of POP concentrations was always switched towards higher values in women than men. POP levels also differed significantly by age, body mass index, weight gain, birth place and social class, but not by parity and breastfeeding. The two younger cohorts had a higher DDT/DDE ratio than the oldest cohort. Conclusion: Although human POP contamination remains common in the city of Barcelona, concentrations decreased significantly in 4. years. Our approach suggests innovative ways to conceive, analyze and present results for other monitoring programs. © 2012 Elsevier B.V.
KW - Environmental exposure/human samples
KW - Environmental pollutants
KW - Health survey
KW - Human biomonitoring
KW - Persistent organic pollutants
KW - Pesticide residues
U2 - 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2012.02.001
DO - 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2012.02.001
M3 - Article
SN - 0048-9697
VL - 423
SP - 151
EP - 161
JO - Science of the Total Environment
JF - Science of the Total Environment
ER -