A Preliminary Study of Biomonitoring for Bisphenol-A in Human Sweat

Measurement of human exposure to the endocrine disruptor bisphenol-A (BPA) is hampered by the ubiquitous but transient exposure for most individuals, coupled with a short metabolic half-life which leads to high inter- and intra-individual variability. We investigated the possibility of measuring mul...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of analytical toxicology 2015-09, Vol.39 (7), p.562-566
Hauptverfasser: Porucznik, Christina A., Cox, Kyley J., Wilkins, Diana G., Anderson, David J., Bailey, Nicole M., Szczotka, Kathryn M., Stanford, Joseph B.
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container_end_page 566
container_issue 7
container_start_page 562
container_title Journal of analytical toxicology
container_volume 39
creator Porucznik, Christina A.
Cox, Kyley J.
Wilkins, Diana G.
Anderson, David J.
Bailey, Nicole M.
Szczotka, Kathryn M.
Stanford, Joseph B.
description Measurement of human exposure to the endocrine disruptor bisphenol-A (BPA) is hampered by the ubiquitous but transient exposure for most individuals, coupled with a short metabolic half-life which leads to high inter- and intra-individual variability. We investigated the possibility of measuring multiday exposure to BPA in human sweat among volunteer participants with the goal of identifying an exposure assessment method less affected by temporal variability. We recruited 50 participants to wear a sweat collection patch (PharmChek®) for 7 days with concurrent collection of daily first-morning urine. Urines and sweat patch extracts were analyzed with quantitative LC–MS-MS using a method we previously validated. In addition, a human volunteer consumed one can of commercially available soup (16 oz, 473 cm3) daily for 3 days and collected urine. Sweat patches (n = 2, 1 per arm) were worn for the 3 days of the study. BPA was detected in quality control specimens prepared by fortification of BPA to sweat patches, but was only detected at 5× above average background on three participant patches. Although the highest measured urine BPA concentration was 195 ng/mL for an individual with deliberate exposure, no BPA was detected above background in the corresponding sweat patches. In this preliminary investigation, the use of sweat patches primarily worn on the upper-outer arm did not detect BPA exposures that were documented by urine monitoring. The absence of BPA in sweat patches may be due to several factors, including insufficient quantity of specimen per patch, or extremely low concentrations of BPA in naturally occurring sweat, among others.
doi_str_mv 10.1093/jat/bkv055
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We investigated the possibility of measuring multiday exposure to BPA in human sweat among volunteer participants with the goal of identifying an exposure assessment method less affected by temporal variability. We recruited 50 participants to wear a sweat collection patch (PharmChek®) for 7 days with concurrent collection of daily first-morning urine. Urines and sweat patch extracts were analyzed with quantitative LC–MS-MS using a method we previously validated. In addition, a human volunteer consumed one can of commercially available soup (16 oz, 473 cm3) daily for 3 days and collected urine. Sweat patches (n = 2, 1 per arm) were worn for the 3 days of the study. BPA was detected in quality control specimens prepared by fortification of BPA to sweat patches, but was only detected at 5× above average background on three participant patches. Although the highest measured urine BPA concentration was 195 ng/mL for an individual with deliberate exposure, no BPA was detected above background in the corresponding sweat patches. In this preliminary investigation, the use of sweat patches primarily worn on the upper-outer arm did not detect BPA exposures that were documented by urine monitoring. 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subjects Adult
Benzhydryl Compounds - pharmacokinetics
Benzhydryl Compounds - urine
Biotransformation
Body Burden
Chromatography, Liquid
Endocrine Disruptors - pharmacokinetics
Endocrine Disruptors - urine
Environmental Monitoring - methods
Female
Glucuronides - pharmacokinetics
Humans
Male
Phenols - pharmacokinetics
Phenols - urine
Pilot Projects
Predictive Value of Tests
Reproducibility of Results
Sweat - metabolism
Tandem Mass Spectrometry
Transdermal Patch
Urinalysis
Young Adult
title A Preliminary Study of Biomonitoring for Bisphenol-A in Human Sweat
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