학술논문

Diet and nondiet predictors of urinary 3-phenoxybenzoic acid in NHANES 1999-2002.
Document Type
article
Source
Environmental health perspectives. 116(8)
Subject
Adolescent
Adult
Age Factors
Benzoates: urine
Child
Diet
Diet Surveys
Environmental Monitoring
Humans
Pesticides: urine
Regression Analysis
Sample Size
Smoking
3-Phenoxybenzoic acid
Biomarkers
Dietary exposure
Pesticides
Pyrethroids3 phenoxybenzoic acid
benzoic acid derivative
cytochrome P450
pesticide
pyrethroid
unclassified drug
3 phenoxybenzoic acid
3-phenoxybenzoic acid
benzoic acid derivative
pesticide
accuracy
adolescent
article
child
cigarette smoking
controlled study
diet restriction
environmental exposure
enzyme inhibition
food contamination
food intake
gardening
health survey
human
information processing
major clinical study
mathematical analysis
prediction
priority journal
regression analysis
United States
urinalysis
adult
age
diet
environmental monitoring
sample size
smoking
urine
Nicotiana tabacum
Adolescent
Adult
Age Factors
Benzoates
Child
Diet
Diet Surveys
Environmental Monitoring
Humans
Pesticides
Regression Analysis
Sample Size
Smoking
Adolescent
Adult
Age Factors
Benzoates: urine
Child
Diet
Diet Surveys
Environmental Monitoring
Humans
Pesticides: urine
Regression Analysis
Sample Size
Smoking
3-Phenoxybenzoic acid
Biomarkers
Dietary exposure
Pesticides
Pyrethroids3 phenoxybenzoic acid
benzoic acid derivative
cytochrome P450
pesticide
pyrethroid
unclassified drug
3 phenoxybenzoic acid
3-phenoxybenzoic acid
benzoic acid derivative
pesticide
accuracy
adolescent
article
child
cigarette smoking
controlled study
diet restriction
environmental exposure
enzyme inhibition
food contamination
food intake
gardening
health survey
human
information processing
major clinical study
mathematical analysis
prediction
priority journal
regression analysis
United States
urinalysis
adult
age
diet
environmental monitoring
sample size
smoking
urine
Nicotiana tabacum
Adolescent
Adult
Age Factors
Benzoates
Child
Diet
Diet Surveys
Environmental Monitoring
Humans
Pesticides
Regression Analysis
Sample Size
Smoking
Language
Abstract
3-Phenoxybenzoic acid (3PBA), a pyrethroid metabolite, was detected in 75% of urine samples analyzed for pesticides in the U.S. National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) 1999-2002. NHANES also includes 24-hr diet data and information on household pesticide use, activities, occupation, demographics, and other exposure factors.The objective of our study was to explore the relative importance of diet versus nondiet predictors in explaining variability in urinary 3PBA. A secondary objective was to explore whether the NHANES data could be used to identify particular foods driving 3PBA levels.We divided subjects into child (6-10 years of age), teen (11-18 years), and adult (> or = 19 years) age groups and restricted our analyses to subjects in the morning sampling session who fasted for > or = 8 hr beforehand. Regression modeling consisted of several model-building steps and a final Tobit regression on the left-censored log 3PBA measurements. We also conducted bootstrap analyses to evaluate the stability of the regression parameters.Reported household pesticide use was not significantly associated with urinary 3PBA in any age group. Diet was significant for all three groups, and certain foods appeared to contribute more than others. Among adults, tobacco use was positively associated with 3PBA (p = 0.0326), and positive associations were suggested with the number of cytochrome p450-inhibiting medications taken (p = 0.0652) and minutes spent gardening (p = 0.0613) in the past month.Although exploratory, our findings underline the importance of collecting accurate data on household pesticide use and dietary intake when evaluating pyrethroid exposure-biomarker relationships.