Perfluorinated Alkyl Acids
in Blood Serum from Primiparous
Women in Sweden: Serial Sampling during Pregnancy and Nursing, And
Temporal Trends 1996–2010
posted on 2012-08-21, 00:00authored byAnders Glynn, Urs Berger, Anders Bignert, Shahid Ullah, Marie Aune, Sanna Lignell, Per Ola Darnerud
We investigated temporal trends of blood serum levels
of 13 perfluorinated
alkyl acids (PFAAs) and perfluorooctane sulfonamide (FOSA) in primiparous
women (N = 413) from Uppsala County, Sweden, sampled
3 weeks after delivery 1996–2010. Levels of the short-chain
perfluorobutane sulfonate (PFBS) and perfluorohexane sulfonate (PFHxS)
increased 11%/y and 8.3%/y, respectively, and levels of the long-chain
perfluorononanoate (PFNA) and perfluorodecanoate (PFDA) increased
4.3%/y and 3.8%/y, respectively. Concomitantly, levels of FOSA (22%/y),
perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS, 8.4%/y), perfluorodecane sulfonate
(PFDS, 10%/y), and perfluorooctanoate (PFOA, 3.1%/y) decreased. Thus,
one or several sources of exposure to the latter compounds have been
reduced or eliminated, whereas exposure to the former compounds has
recently increased. We explored if maternal levels of PFOS, PFOA,
and PFNA during the early nursing period are representative for the
fetal development period, using serial maternal serum samples, including
cord blood (N = 19). PFAA levels in maternal serum
sampled during pregnancy and the nursing period as well as in cord
blood were strongly correlated. Strongest correlations between cord
blood levels and maternal levels were observed for maternal serum
sampled shortly before or after the delivery (r =
0.70–0.89 for PFOS and PFOA). A similar pattern was observed
for PFNA, although the correlations were less strong due to levels
close to the method detection limit in cord blood.