posted on 2020-03-11, 17:06authored byStephanie
C. Hammel, Kate Hoffman, Allison L. Phillips, Jessica L. Levasseur, Amelia M. Lorenzo, Thomas F. Webster, Heather M. Stapleton
Organophosphate esters (OPEs) are
applied as additive flame retardants,
and along with phthalates, are also used as plasticizers in consumer
products. As such, human exposure is common and chronic. Deployed
as personal passive samplers, silicone wristbands have been shown
to detect over a thousand industrial and consumer product chemicals;
however, few studies have evaluated chemical concentrations with their
corresponding biomarkers of exposure, especially in children. Further,
little is known about how well the wristbands predict individual exposure
compared to existing validated external exposure tools such as indoor
air, dust, and hand wipes. Here, we analyzed wristbands worn by children
(ages 3–6) for 18 OPEs and 10 phthalates and compared them
to corresponding urinary biomarkers. In wristbands, 13 of 18 OPEs
and all phthalates were detected in >80% of wristbands, and 6 OPEs
and 4 phthalates were significantly associated with corresponding
urinary metabolites (rs = 0.2–0.6, p < 0.05). When compared to paired hand wipes and house
dust, wristbands were found to have similar or greater correlation
coefficients with respective urinary biomarkers. These results suggest
that wristbands can serve as effective and quantitative assessment
tools for evaluating personal exposure to some OPEs and phthalates,
and for certain chemicals, may provide a better exposure estimate
than indoor dust.