Biomarkers of environmental benzene exposure.
- 1 December 1996
- journal article
- Published by Environmental Health Perspectives in Environmental Health Perspectives
- Vol. 104 (suppl 6) , 1141-1146
- https://doi.org/10.1289/ehp.961041141
Abstract
Environmental exposures to benzene result in increases in body burden that are reflected in various biomarkers of exposure, including benzene in exhaled breath, benzene in blood and urinary trans-trans-muconic acid and S-phenylmercapturic acid. A review of the literature indicates that these biomarkers can be used to distinguish populations with different levels of exposure (such as smokers from nonsmokers and occupationally exposed from environmentally exposed populations) and to determine differences in metabolism. Biomarkers in humans have shown that the percentage of benzene metabolized by the ring-opening pathway is greater at environmental exposures than that at higher occupational exposures, a trend similar to that found in animal studies. This suggests that the dose-response curve is nonlinear; that potential different metabolic mechanisms exist at high and low doses; and that the validity of a linear extrapolation of adverse effects measured at high doses to a population exposed to lower, environmental levels of benzene is uncertain. Time-series measurements of the biomarker, exhaled breath, were used to evaluate a physiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) model. Biases were identified between the PBPK model predictions and experimental data that were adequately described using an empirical compartmental model. It is suggested that a mapping of the PBPK model to a compartmental model can be done to optimize the parameters in the PBPK model to provide a future framework for developing a population physiologically based pharmacokinetic model.Keywords
This publication has 37 references indexed in Scilit:
- MEASUREMENT OF THE URINARY BENZENE METABOLITE trans, trans-MUCONIC ACID FROM BENZENE EXPOSURE IN HUMANSJournal of Toxicology and Environmental Health, 1996
- Evaluation of assays for the identification and quantitation of muconic acid, a benzene metabolite in human urineJournal of Toxicology and Environmental Health, 1994
- Urinary excretion of unmetabolized benzene as an indicator of benzene exposureJournal of Toxicology and Environmental Health, 1993
- Urinary t,t-muconic acid as an indicator of exposure to benzene.Occupational and Environmental Medicine, 1989
- Environmental and occupational exposure to benzene by analysis of breath and blood.Occupational and Environmental Medicine, 1988
- Biological monitoring of workers exposed to benzene in the coke oven industry.Occupational and Environmental Medicine, 1988
- Exposures to Benzene and Other Volatile Compounds from Active and Passive SmokingArchives of environmental health, 1987
- Quantitative relation of urinary phenol levels to breathzone benzene concentrations: a factory survey.Occupational and Environmental Medicine, 1986
- Benzene levels in ambient air and breath of smokers and nonsmokers in urban and pristine environmentsJournal of Toxicology and Environmental Health, 1985
- Minimum realizations and system modeling. I. Fundamental theory and algorithmsAIChE Journal, 1972