Merging Models and Biomonitoring
Data to Characterize Sources and
Pathways of Human Exposure to
Organophosphorus Pesticides in the
Salinas Valley of California
Posted on 2007-05-01 - 00:00
We characterize cumulative intakes of organophosphorus
(OP) pesticides in an agricultural region of California by
drawing on human biomonitoring data, California pesticide
use reporting (PUR) data, and limited environmental
samples together with outputs from the CalTOX multimedia,
multipathway, source-to-dose model. The study population
is the CHAMACOS cohort of almost 600 pregnant Latina
women in the Salinas Valley region. We use model estimates
of OP intake and urinary dialkylphosphate (DAP) metabolite
excretion to develop premises about relative contributions
from different exposure sources and pathways. We evaluate
these premises by comparing the magnitude and variation
of DAPs in the CHAMACOS cohort with those of the
whole U.S. population using data from the National Health
and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES). This
comparison supports the premise that diet is the common
and dominant exposure pathway in both populations.
Biomarker comparisons and model results support the
observation that, relative to NHANES, the CHAMACOS
population has a statistically significant (p < 0.001) added
intake of OP pesticides with low inter-individual variability.
We attribute the magnitude and small variance of this intake
to residential nondietary exposures from local agricultural
OP uses. These results show that mass-balance models
can estimate exposures for OP pesticides within the range
measured by biological monitoring.
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McKone, Thomas E.; Castorina, Rosemary; Harnly, Martha E.; Kuwabara, Yu; Eskenazi, Brenda; Bradman, Asa (2016). Merging Models and Biomonitoring
Data to Characterize Sources and
Pathways of Human Exposure to
Organophosphorus Pesticides in the
Salinas Valley of California. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/es0618447