6533b85ffe1ef96bd12c122e

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Exposure to benzene and childhood leukaemia: a pilot case-control study

Maria Valeria TorregrossaDaniela FerranteSara NegriLucia MiligiForastiere FrancescoSantina CannizzaroAlessandra RanucciCorrado MagnaniPaolo SaccoSusanna LagorioPierluigi CoccoLuigi BisantiRoberto Rondelli

subject

Participation biasEpidemiologybusiness.industryResearchConfoundingCase-control studyGeneral MedicineUrineSettore MED/42 - Igiene Generale E Applicata1692Childhood leukaemiabenzene chilhood leukaemiaToxicologychemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryEnvironmental health1724MedicineArea of residence15061717BenzenebusinessCotinine1719

description

Objectives Main purpose To evaluate the feasibility of a measurement-based assessment of benzene exposure in case-control studies of paediatric cancer; Additional aims To identify the sources of exposure variability; to assess the performance of two benzene biomarkers; to verify the occurrence of participation bias; to check whether exposures to benzene and to 50 Hz magnetic fields were correlated, and might exert reciprocal confounding effects. Design Pilot case-control study of childhood leukaemia and exposure to benzene assessed by repeated seasonal weekly measurements in breathing zone air samples and outside the children9s dwellings, with concurrent determinations of cotinine, t-t-muconic acid (MA) and sulfo-phenylmercapturic acid (S-PMA) in urine. Participants 108 cases and 194 controls were eligible for inclusion. Results Full-participation was obtained from 46 cases and 60 controls, with low dropout rates before four repeats (11% and 17%); an additional 23 cases and 80 controls allowed the collection of outdoor air samples only. The average benzene concentration in personal and outdoor air samples was 3 μg/m3 (SD 1.45) and 2.7 μg/m3 (SD 1.41), respectively. Personal exposure was strongly influenced by outdoor benzene concentrations, higher in the cold seasons than in warm seasons, and not affected by gender, age, area of residence or caseness. Urinary excretion of S-PMA and personal benzene exposure were well correlated. Outdoor benzene levels were lower among participant controls compared with non-participants, but did not differ between participant and non-participant cases; the direction of the bias was found to depend on the cut-point chosen to distinguish exposed and unexposed. Exposures to benzene and extremely low-frequency magnetic fields were positively correlated. Conclusions Repeated individual measurements are needed to account for the seasonal variability in benzene exposure, and they have the additional advantage of increasing the study power. Measurement-based assessment of benzene exposure in studies of childhood leukaemia appears feasible, although it is financially and logistically demanding.

https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2012-002275