Urinary Cotinine in Children and Adults during and after Semiexperimental Exposure to Environmental Tobacco Smoke
- 1 April 1995
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Archives of environmental health
- Vol. 50 (2) , 130-138
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00039896.1995.9940890
Abstract
Urinary cotinine (U-cotinine) as a biomarker of environmental tobacco smoke exposure was evaluated in 14 children (age 4–11 y) and in 7 adults who were exposed to environmental tobacco smoke at an air nicotine level of 110 mg/m3 for 2 h in a bus. Nicotine in air and U-cotinine were measured by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry before, during, and after the experiment. U-cotinine rose rapidly to a maximum after a median of 6 h following the end of exposure; remained at an apparent plateau for half a day; and then decreased exponentially, with a mean half-time of 19 h (95% confidence interval 18–20 h; no significant difference between children and adults). The maximum U-cotinine was higher in the children (mean = 22 mg/l) than in the adults (13 mg/l; p = .005); decreased with age among the children (r = –.74; p = .002); and increased as the estimated inhaled nicotine dose increased. Therefore, the findings of the present study showed that young children had higher U-cotinine than adults at the same experimental environmental tobacco smoke exposure, probably because they had a higher relative nicotine dose because of a higher relative ventilation rate, and possibly also because of metabolic differences; the elimination rate did not differ. The long half-time makes U-cotinine a good biomarker of environmental tobacco smoke exposure; the time of sampling is not very critical. Dilution-adjusted concentrations should be employed, and in children, preferably by density correction. A certain urinary cotinine level indicates a lower environmental tobacco smoke exposure in a small child than in an adult.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Exposure to Environmental Tobacco Smoke in the Household and Urinary Cotinine Excretion, Heavy Metals Retention, and Lung FunctionArchives of environmental health, 1992
- Passive smoking and childhood asthmaAllergy, 1991
- Elimination of cotinine from body fluids: implications for noninvasive measurement of tobacco smoke exposure.American Journal of Public Health, 1988
- Determination of cotinine in urine using glass capillary gas chromatography and selective detection, with special reference to the biological monitoring of passive smokingJournal of Chromatography A, 1988
- Kinetics of cotinine after oral and intravenous administration to manEuropean Journal of Clinical Pharmacology, 1987
- Elimination from the body of tobacco products by smokers and passive smokersJAMA, 1986
- Measuring the Exposure of Infants to Tobacco SmokeNew England Journal of Medicine, 1984
- Cotinine disposition and effectsClinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics, 1983
- Smoking-induced changes in nicotine disposition: Application of a new HPLC assay for nicotine and its metabolitesClinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics, 1982
- Passive smoking at workInternationales Archiv für Arbeitsmedizin, 1980