Descriptive analysis of organophosphate ester metabolites in a pan-Canadian pregnancy cohort.
- DOI
- Language of the publication
- English
- Date
- 2023-04-07
- Type
- Article
- Author(s)
- Ashley-Martin, Jillian
- MacPherson, Susan
- Zhao, Zhao
- Gaudreau, Éric
- Provencher, Gilles
- Fisher, Mandy
- Borghese, Michael M.
- Bouchard, Maryse F.
- Booij, Linda
- Arbuckle, Tye E.
- Publisher
- Elsevier
Abstract
Organophosphate esters (OPEs) are widely used in numerous consumer products for their flame retardant and plasticizing properties. Despite potential widespread exposure, biomonitoring data during critical windows of development are scarce and limited to the most widely studied metabolites. We quantified urinary concentrations of multiple OPE metabolites in a vulnerable Canadian population. Using data and biobanked specimens from the Maternal-Infant Research on Environmental Chemicals (MIREC) study (2008-2011), we measured first trimester urinary concentrations of 15 OPE metabolites as well as one flame retardant metabolite and quantified associations with sociodemographic and sample collection characteristics in 1865 pregnant participants. We applied 2 different analytical methods to quantify OPEs, one using UItra-Performance Liquid Chromatography coupled to tandem mass spectrometry (UPLC-MS/MS) and the other using Atmospheric Pressure Gas Chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry (APGC-MS/MS) with sensitive limits of detection (0.008-0.1 μg/L). We modelled associations between sociodemographic and sample collection characteristics and specific gravity-standardized chemical concentrations. Six OPE metabolites were detected in the majority (68.1-97.4 %) of participants. Bis-(2-chloroethyl) hydrogen phosphate had the highest detection rate (97.4 %). Diphenyl phosphate had the highest geometric mean concentration (0.657 μg/L). Metabolites of tricresyl phosphate were detected in few participants. Associations between sociodemographic characteristics varied according to each OPE metabolite. Pre-pregnancy body mass index tended to be positively associated with OPE metabolite concentrations whereas age tended to be inversely associated with OPE concentrations. OPE concentrations were, on average, higher in urine samples collected in the summer than other seasons the winter. We present the largest biomonitoring study of OPE metabolites in pregnant people to date. These findings demonstrate widespread exposure to OPEs and their metabolites and identify subpopulations who may experience heightened exposure.
Plain language summary
Health Canada helps to protect the health of Canadians by assessing and managing the health risks associated with exposure to environmental chemicals. Organophosphate esters (OPEs) are widely used in numerous consumer products for their flame retardant and plasticizing properties. Biomonitoring data - which inform risk assessment and management - during critical windows of development are scarce and limited to the most widely studied metabolites. In this study, we measured urinary concentrations of multiple OPE metabolites in participants enrolled in the Maternal-Infant Research on Environmental Chemicals (MIREC) study. MIREC recruited 2001 women from 10 Canadian cities between 2008-2011. We examined urinary concentrations according to maternal sociodemographic and sample collection characteristics in 1865 pregnant participants. Six OPE metabolites were detected in the majority (59.0-97.4%) of participants. Bis-(2-chloroethyl) hydrogen phosphate had the highest detection rate (97%). Diphenyl phosphate had the highest geometric mean concentration (0.657 µg/L). Metabolites of tricresyl phosphate were detected in few participants. Associations between sociodemographic characteristics varied according to each OPE. Pre-pregnancy body mass index tended to be positively associated with OPE concentrations whereas maternal age tended to be inversely associated with OPE concentrations. OPE concentrations were, on average, higher in urine samples collected in the summer than the winter. We present the largest biomonitoring study of OPE metabolites in pregnant people to date. These findings demonstrate widespread exposure to OPEs and identify subpopulations who may experience heightened exposure.These results provide Canadian specific data in a vulnerable population that may be used to support the risk assessment of these chemicals.
Subject
- Health,
- Health and safety