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Introduction to Exposure Investigations

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Presentation on theme: "Introduction to Exposure Investigations"— Presentation transcript:

1 Introduction to Exposure Investigations
Susan W. Metcalf, MD Kenneth Orloff, PhD Greg Zarus

2 Assessing Human Exposure to Environmental Contamination
Exposure Investigations Assessing Human Exposure to Environmental Contamination

3 Today’s Agenda Introduction 20 min How We Decide 25 min
Who we are Purpose/Mission What we do How We Decide min Four questions Bio Markers min How they’re used Limitations Quality Assurance 55 min Limiting uncertainty Altered methods Site Example min Community specific sampling Biologic and Environmental samples

4 Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry

5 What is ATSDR ? A Federal public health agency that addresses human health issues that might arise from exposure to hazardous substances in the environment

6 Site Specific Evaluations
Public Health Advisories Public Health Assessments Health Consultations Exposure Investigations

7 Public Health Assessments Evaluate
Environmental data Health outcome data Community concerns Environmental data- Bulk of the PHA usually concerns environmental data available environmental data collected by EPA or state environmental agencies. which may be inadequate to evaluate pathways of exposure to contaminants of concerns and for making a public health determination may be out-of-date

8 Rationale for Exposure Investigations
“Virtually no information about actual exposure to the public is derived from personal sampling, direct exposure of individuals, or total exposure assessment modeling.” National Academy of Sciences, 1991 In 1991 ATSDR requested that the National Research Council convene the Committee on Environmental Epidemiology to review current knowledge about the health effects of hazardous substances and to suggest ways to improve the scientific bases for evaluating the effects of exposure to these substances. they came to the not-to startling conclusion that exposure assessment is crucial for carrying out environmental epi studies. And in the course of addressing appropriate approaches to measuring exposure, they specifically looked at the public health assessments The slide sums up what the report said about the information provided in PHA about off-site contamination

9 Objective of Exposure Investigation
To gather and analyze site-specific information to determine if human populations have been exposed to hazardous substances 1. Fill data gap in pathway for a contaminant Site-specific- not a study and are not generalizable Focus on those that have the likelihood of the highest exposure.\ often the purpose of an EI is to provide information to transition to a follow up activity Health study To get partners (EPA, state agencies) to take action

10 The EI Section: Multidisciplinary
Engineer Industrial hygienist Epidemiologist Environmental scientist Toxicologist Atmospheric scientist Physicians

11 Environmental Health Continuum
1 2 3 4 5 Exposure Assessment Epi studies Pathway Transport

12 Types of Exposure Investigations
Bio-medical testing (blood, urine, hair) Environmental testing (air, water, soil, house dust) Exposure-Dose Reconstruction (ground water/air modeling)

13 Bio-medical Testing Biomarkers of exposure Biomarkers of effect
Blood serum dioxins Urine mercury Biomarkers of effect IgE antibodies to diisocyanates Urine RBP Biomarkers of susceptibility α1-antitrypsin deficiency

14 Biological Sampling Blood Urine Hair Expired air Saliva Fat

15 Environmental Sampling
Air Water Soil House dust Food

16 Dose Reconstruction Air Modeling for Concentrations
Water Modeling for Concentration Dose Calculations

17 Exposure can be defined as contact over time between a person and one or more biologic, chemical or physical agents. Conceptually, Exposure would seem to be a simple concept.

18 Exposure Parameters Agent Environmental media/transport Concentration
Source Point of exposure Route of exposure A LARGE number of parameters that need to be described to define an exposure and need to be considered if you want to measure exposure Agent Biologic Single Agent Chemical Physical Mixtures Sources Anthropogenic/Non anthropogenic Area/Point Stationary/Mobile Indoor/Outdoor Environmental Media and Transport Air Water Soil Dust Food- subsistence fishing; locally group vegetables Point of Exposure- location that contact with media occurs Residence /Non residential Indoors/Outdoors Occupational/non occupational Route of Exposure inhalation ingestion dermal contact Concentration

19 Exposure Parameters (Continued)
Frequency Population Time frame Duration Geographic scope Duration- how long does the exposure last minutes hours days weeks months lifetime Frequency- may partly be determined by individual activity pattern continuous intermittent rare cyclic random Geographic Scope Site specific Local Regional National International Global Exposed Population General population Subgroups (specific groups/ susceptible groups) Window of vulnerability Time Frame Past Present Future Trends

20 Characteristics of an Exposure Investigation
Site-specific Public health-oriented Involves community Exposure investigations are a public health service activity not meant to be research (but we can learn from them) Frequent collaboration with Community Involvement Branch Health Education

21 Exposure Investigations
Fill specific data gaps Are completed in a relatively short time period Support a collaborative public health process by involving stakeholders Provide a scientific basis to support public health actions

22 Limitations of Exposure Investigations
Exposure does not mean effect Source of the exposure may not be identified May represent only current conditions Relevant biomarkers are limited to certain contaminants Lead and Hg? Most of our investigations that involve biomarkers deal with metals and persistent organic compounds

23 ATSDR Exposure Investigations (since late 1997)
53 Sites where we collected Biological and Biota samples 54 Sites where we collected Environmental samples (

24 ATSDR Exposure Investigations Biological and Biota
53 Biological and Biota (e.g.) Urine; mercury Blood; dioxin Hair; arsenic fish, crabs, eggs; metals, pesticides

25 ATSDR Exposure Investigations Environmental
54 Environmental (e.g.) Air: hydrogen sulfide Water: lead Soil: PCBs Dust: arsenic (PM) (PM)

26 Requestors of Exposure Investigations
State/County/Tribal health departments Citizens/residents (Petitioned Health Assessments) Elected representatives Environmental action groups

27 How to get our help Requesters submit answers to four questions designed to evaluate if an exposure investigation can help (discussed later). An inter-disciplinary panel of scientists interview the requester to determine the best course of action.


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