PFAS levels and exposure determinants in sensitive population groups

Lucia Fábelová(Slovak Medical University), Andrea Beneíto(Universitat Jaume I), Maribel Casas(Universitat Pompeu Fabra), Ann Colles(Flemish Institute for Technological Research), Louise Dalsager(University of Southern Denmark), Elly Den Hond(Provincial Institute for Hygiene), Clémentine Dereumeaux(Santé Publique France), Kelly K. Ferguson(National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences), Liese Gilles(Flemish Institute for Technological Research), Eva Govarts(Flemish Institute for Technological Research), Amaia Irizar(Instituto de Salud Carlos III), María-José López-Espinosa(Universitat de València), Parisa Montazeri(Barcelona Institute for Global Health), Bert Morrens(University of Antwerp), Henrieta Patayová(Slovak Medical University), Katarína Rausová(Slovak Medical University), Denisa Richterová(Slovak Medical University), Laura Rodríguez Martín(Flemish Institute for Technological Research), Loreto Santa‐Marina(Basque Government), Thomas Schettgen(RWTH Aachen University), Greet Schoeters(Flemish Institute for Technological Research), Line Småstuen Haug(Norwegian Institute of Public Health), Maria Uhl(Environment Agency Austria), Gro D. Villanger(Norwegian Institute of Public Health), Martine Vrijheid(Universitat Pompeu Fabra), Cécile Zaros(Institut national d'études démographiques), Ľ Palkovičová Murínová(Slovak Medical University)
Chemosphere
December 9, 2022
Cited by 71Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) are persistent organic pollutants. The first exposure to PFAS occurs in utero, after birth it continues via breast milk, food intake, environment, and consumer products that contain these chemicals. Our aim was to identify determinants of PFAS concentrations in sensitive population subgroups- pregnant women and newborns. METHODS: Nine European birth cohorts provided exposure data on PFAS in pregnant women (INMA-Gipuzkoa, Sabadell, Valencia, ELFE and MoBa; total N = 5897) or newborns (3xG study, FLEHS 2, FLEHS 3 and PRENATAL; total N = 940). PFOS, PFOA, PFHxS and PFNA concentrations were measured in maternal or cord blood, depending on the cohort (FLEHS 2 measured only PFOS and PFOA). PFAS concentrations were analysed according to maternal characteristics (age, BMI, parity, previous breastfeeding, smoking, and food consumption during pregnancy) and parental educational level. The association between potential determinants and PFAS concentrations was evaluated using multiple linear regression models. RESULTS: We observed significant variations in PFAS concentrations among cohorts. Higher PFAS concentrations were associated with higher maternal age, primipara birth, and educational level, both for maternal blood and cord blood. Higher PFAS concentrations in maternal blood were associated with higher consumption of fish and seafood, meat, offal and eggs. In cord blood, higher PFHxS concentrations were associated with daily meat consumption and higher PFNA with offal consumption. Daily milk and dairy consumption were associated with lower concentrations of PFAS in both, pregnant women and newborns. CONCLUSION: High detection rates of the four most abundant PFAS demonstrate ubiquitous exposure of sensitive populations, which is of concern. This study identified several determinants of PFAS exposure in pregnant women and newborns, including dietary factors, and these findings can be used for proposing measures to reduce PFAS exposure, particularly from dietary sources.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis