19 research outputs found
Household vacuum cleaners vs. the high-volume surface sampler for collection of carpet dust samples in epidemiologic studies of children
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Levels of pesticides and other compounds in carpet dust can be useful indicators of exposure in epidemiologic studies, particularly for young children who are in frequent contact with carpets. The high-volume surface sampler (HVS3) is often used to collect dust samples in the room in which the child had spent the most time. This method can be expensive and cumbersome, and it has been suggested that an easier method would be to remove dust that had already been collected with the household vacuum cleaner. However, the household vacuum integrates exposures over multiple rooms, some of which are not relevant to the child's exposure, and differences in vacuuming equipment and practices could affect the chemical concentration data. Here, we compare levels of pesticides and other compounds in dust from household vacuums to that collected using the HVS3.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Both methods were used in 45 homes in California. HVS3 samples were collected in one room, while the household vacuum had typically been used throughout the home. The samples were analyzed for 64 organic compounds, including pesticides, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, and polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), using GC/MS in multiple ion monitoring mode; and for nine metals using conventional microwave-assisted acid digestion combined with ICP/MS.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>The methods agreed in detecting the presence of the compounds 77% to 100% of the time (median 95%). For compounds with less than 100% agreement, neither method was consistently more sensitive than the other. Median concentrations were similar for most analytes, and Spearman correlation coefficients were 0.60 or higher except for allethrin (0.15) and malathion (0.24), which were detected infrequently, and benzo(k)fluoranthene (0.55), benzo(a)pyrene (0.55), PCB 105 (0.54), PCB 118 (0.54), and PCB 138 (0.58). Assuming that the HVS3 method is the "gold standard," the extent to which the household vacuum cleaner method yields relative risk estimates closer to unity by increasing random measurement error varies by compound and depends on the method used to calculate relative risk.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>The household vacuum cleaner method appears to be a reasonable alternative to the HVS3 for detecting, ranking, and quantifying the concentrations of pesticides and other compounds in carpet dust.</p
Embracing Monogenic Parkinson's Disease: The MJFF Global Genetic PD Cohort
© 2023 The Authors. Movement Disorders published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.[Background] As gene-targeted therapies are increasingly being developed for Parkinson's disease (PD), identifying and characterizing carriers of specific genetic pathogenic variants is imperative. Only a small fraction of the estimated number of subjects with monogenic PD worldwide are currently represented in the literature and availability of clinical data and clinical trial-ready cohorts is limited.[Objective] The objectives are to (1) establish an international cohort of affected and unaffected individuals with PD-linked variants; (2) provide harmonized and quality-controlled clinical characterization data for each included individual; and (3) further promote collaboration of researchers in the field of monogenic PD.[Methods] We conducted a worldwide, systematic online survey to collect individual-level data on individuals with PD-linked variants in SNCA, LRRK2, VPS35, PRKN, PINK1, DJ-1, as well as selected pathogenic and risk variants in GBA and corresponding demographic, clinical, and genetic data. All registered cases underwent thorough quality checks, and pathogenicity scoring of the variants and genotype–phenotype relationships were analyzed.[Results] We collected 3888 variant carriers for our analyses, reported by 92 centers (42 countries) worldwide. Of the included individuals, 3185 had a diagnosis of PD (ie, 1306 LRRK2, 115 SNCA, 23 VPS35, 429 PRKN, 75 PINK1, 13 DJ-1, and 1224 GBA) and 703 were unaffected (ie, 328 LRRK2, 32 SNCA, 3 VPS35, 1 PRKN, 1 PINK1, and 338 GBA). In total, we identified 269 different pathogenic variants; 1322 individuals in our cohort (34%) were indicated as not previously published.[Conclusions] Within the MJFF Global Genetic PD Study Group, we (1) established the largest international cohort of affected and unaffected individuals carrying PD-linked variants; (2) provide harmonized and quality-controlled clinical and genetic data for each included individual; (3) promote collaboration in the field of genetic PD with a view toward clinical and genetic stratification of patients for gene-targeted clinical trials. © 2023 The Authors. Movement Disorders published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.This project was funded by The Michael J. Fox Foundation (ID 15015.02)Peer reviewe
Original Contribution Is House-Dust Nicotine a Good Surrogate for Household Smoking?
The literature is inconsistent regarding associations between parental smoking and childhood leukemia, possibly because previous studies used self-reported smoking habits as surrogates for children’s true exposures to cigarette smoke. Here, the authors investigated the use of nicotine concentrations in house dust as measures of children’s exposure to cigarette smoke in 469 households from the Northern California Childhood Leukemia Study (1999–2007). House dust was collected by using high-volume surface samplers and household vacuum cleaners and was analyzed for nicotine via gas chromatography–mass spectrometry. Using multivariable linear regression, the authors evaluated the effects of self-reported parental smoking, parental demographics, house characteristics, and other covariates on house-dust nicotine concentrations. They observed that nicotine concentrations in house dust were associated with self-reported smoking for periods of months and years before dust collection. Furthermore, the authors found that the relation between nicotine dust levels and self-reported smoking varied by parental age and socioeconomic status. These findings suggest that house-dust nicotine concentrations reflect long-term exposures to cigarette smoke in the home and that they may be less biased surrogates for children’s exposures to cigarette smoke than self-reported smoking habits. child; dust; environmental exposure; infant; leukemia; linear models; nicotine; smoking Abbreviations: HVS3, high-volume surface sampler; KW ANOVA, Kruskal-Wallis one-way analysis of variance; NCCLS, Norther
Phthalate Exposure and Risk Assessment in California Child Care Facilities
Approximately
13 million U.S. children less than 6 years old spend
some time in early childhood education (ECE) facilities where they
may be exposed to potentially harmful chemicals during critical periods
of development. We measured five phthalate esters in indoor dust (<i>n</i> = 39) and indoor and outdoor air (<i>n</i> =
40 and 14, respectively) at ECE facilities in Northern California.
Dust and airborne concentrations were used to perform a probabilistic
health risk assessment to compare estimated exposures with risk levels
established for chemicals causing reproductive toxicity and cancer
under California’s Proposition 65. DiÂ(2-ethylhexyl) phthalate
(DEHP) and butyl benzyl phthalate (BBzP) were the dominant phthalates
present in floor dust (medians = 172.2 and 46.8 ÎĽg/g, respectively),
and dibutyl phthalate (DBP), diethyl phthalate (DEP), and diisobutyl
phthalate (DIBP) were the dominant phthalates in indoor air (medians
= 0.52, 0.21, and 0.10 ÎĽg/m<sup>3</sup>, respectively). The
risk assessment results indicate that 82–89% of children in
California ECE had DBP exposure estimates exceeding reproductive health
benchmarks. Further, 8–11% of children less than 2 years old
had DEHP exposure estimates exceeding cancer benchmarks. This is the
largest study to measure phthalate exposure in U.S. ECE facilities
and findings indicate wide phthalate contamination and potential risk
to developing children