Exposure to Pollution Clinical Trial
Official title:
La Lambda-cyhalothrine Comme Insecticide privilégié en Milieu Agricole: étude de la toxicocinétique de Biomarqueurs Pour le Suivi de l'Exposition Des Travailleurs
Exposure to pyrethroid pesticides is a growing concern in the workplace especially since they are also present in the diet of the general population. It is important to monitor human exposure to these contaminants. Exposure to pyrethroids may occur by multiple routes of exposure (oral, inhalation and dermal), such that it is difficult to assess absorbed doses from external exposure assessments. Biological monitoring, which consists of measuring urinary metabolites, is now recognized by the scientific community as a preferred approach to assess exposure to this type of compound. These metabolites are biotransformation products produced in the human body from the exposure compounds. However, interpretation of these biological monitoring data requires a proper knowledge of the kinetic behavior and thus the fate of the substance of interest in the human body in order to link levels of biomarkers in individuals to actual absorbed doses. Human kinetic data are still poorly documented in the case of pyrethroids. The study in volunteers exposed to pyrethroids in controlled conditions will allow acquiring new urinary and blood profiles to refine and address uncertainties in the toxicokinetics of lambda-cyhalothrin following oral and dermal exposure. Those data will serve to build a toxicokinetic model to predict absorbed doses in workers from urinary metabolite measurements and therefore better assess health risks.
Lambda-cyhalothrin is a synthetic pyrethroid pesticide widely used in Quebec to fight
against pests in vegetable crops. In recent years, this pyrethroid has become one of the
most used insecticides in these crops. However, there is a paucity of data on the biological
behavior of this molecule in humans. Given the extensive use of this pyrethroid, it becomes
essential to develop tools to properly assess exposure among workers largely in contact with
pesticides during spraying or work in treated areas. Biological monitoring, which consists
of measuring urinary metabolites is considered a preferred approach to evaluate absorbed
doses of this type of product in the workplace, given the potentially combined exposure
through the respiratory, dermal and oral routes. However, interpretation of biological
monitoring data requires a good knowledge of the kinetic behavior of the substance of
interest in the human body, to link biomarker levels among workers to actual absorbed doses.
The overall objective of this project is to address the lack of knowledge on the
toxicokinetics of biomarkers of exposure to lambda-cyhalothrin in humans for a better
interpretation of routine biomonitoring data and hence health risks in exposed workers.
First, a controlled kinetic study will be conducted in volunteers exposed acutely to a low
oral dose of lambda-cyhalothrin (oral reference dose) followed by a cutaneous dose (of
lambda-cyhalothrin formulation used by sprayers). The protocol will be similar to a previous
one used by our team for toxicokinetic assessment of other pesticides. Secondly, a
toxicokinetic model will be developed to simulate the kinetics of biomarkers of exposure to
lambda-cyhalothrin, using data from the controlled kinetic study and based on a previous
toxicokinetic model for related pyrethroids.
More specifically, volunteers will be exposed orally to 0.025 mg/kg body weight of
lambda-cyhalothrin (single oral dosing). According to recent health risk assessment by the
US Environmental Protection Agency (US EPA), volunteers should not incur any adverse effects
relating to such dosing. Three weeks following oral dosing (to allow complete elimination of
the compound from the body), the same volunteers will be exposed dermally to a
lambda-cyhalothrin-based formulation used on crops. The formulation will be applied on a
40cm2 surface of the forearm at a concentration corresponding to the one used in the
workplace (Matador 120EC). The treated area will not be washed for a period of 6 h. This
type of application will be similar to that of exposed workers. Urinary and blood
measurements of specific biomarkers of exposure to these insecticides will be performed.
These biomarkers of exposure are already known from other studies and have been shown to be
good bioindicators of exposure to pyrethroids. The kinetic profile will serve to link
absorbed doses to blood and urinary concentrations of metabolites through time. Personal
information on health status, diet and lifestyle will be documented. A total of 7 volunteers
will spend a full day at the University during which they will be exposed to a low dose of
pesticide. Blood and urinary samples will be collected. Four short visits of one hour will
be needed for blood collections. Every urine void for a period of 84 hours will be collected
in a different bottle. This whole process will be repeated twice to test two routes of
exposure to this insecticide, oral (swallowed) and dermal (applied to the forearm).
The study in volunteers exposed to lambda-cyhalothrin in controlled conditions will allow
acquiring new urinary and blood metabolite profiles to better understand their kinetic
behavior and essential biological determinants of the observed profiles. These data can then
be used in a toxicokinetic model to predict the main routes of exposure and associated
absorbed doses in workers exposed to formulations containing lambda-cyhalothrin.
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