PFASs : What can we learn from the European Human Biomonitoring Initiative HBM4EU
Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs) were one of the priority substance groups selected which have been investigated under the ambitious European Joint programme HBM4EU (2017–2022). In order to answer policy relevant questions concerning exposure and health effects of PFASs in Europe several activities were developed under HBM4EU namely i) synthesis of HBM data generated in Europe prior to HBM4EU by developing new platforms, ii) development of a Quality Assurance/Quality Control Program covering 12 biomarkers of PFASs, iii) aligned and harmonized human biomonitoring studies of PFASs. In addition, some cohort studies (on mother-child exposure, occupational exposure to hexavalent chromium) were initiated, and literature researches on risk assessment of mixtures of PFAS, health effects and effect biomarkers were performed. The HBM4EU Aligned Studies have generated internal exposure reference levels for 12 PFASs in 1957 European teenagers aged 12–18 years. The results showed that serum levels of 14.3% of the teenagers exceeded 6.9 μg/L PFASs, which corresponds to the EFSA guideline value for a tolerable weekly intake (TWI) of 4.4 ng/kg for some of the investigated PFASs (PFOA, PFOS, PFNA and PFHxS). In Northern and Western Europe, 24% of teenagers exceeded this level. The most relevant sources of exposure identified were drinking water and some foods (fish, eggs, offal and locally produced foods). HBM4EU occupational studies also revealed very high levels of PFASs exposure in workers (P95: 192 μg/L in chrome plating facilities), highlighting the importance of monitoring PFASs exposure in specific workplaces. In addition, environmental contaminated hotspots causing high exposure to the population were identified. In conclusion, the frequent and high PFASs exposure evidenced by HBM4EU strongly suggests the need to take all possible measures to prevent further contamination of the European population, in addition to adopting remediation measures in hotspot areas, to protect human health and the environment. HBM4EU findings also support the restriction of the whole group of PFASs. Further, research and definition for additional toxicological dose-effect relationship values for more PFASs compounds is needed.
Main Authors: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
---|---|
Format: | Article/Letter to editor biblioteca |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | Emerging health risks, European teenagers, Exposure, HBM4EU, Human biomonitoring, Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs), |
Online Access: | https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/pfass-what-can-we-learn-from-the-european-human-biomonitoring-ini |
Tags: |
Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
|
id |
dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-613924 |
---|---|
record_format |
koha |
spelling |
dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-6139242024-12-04 Uhl, Maria Schoeters, Greet Govarts, Eva Bil, Wieneke Fletcher, Tony Haug, Line Småstuen Hoogenboom, Ron Gundacker, Claudia Trier, Xenia Fernandez, Mariana F. Calvo, Argelia Castaño López, Marta Esteban Coertjens, Dries Santonen, Tiina Murínová, Ľubica Palkovičová Richterová, Denisa Brouwere, Katleen De Hauzenberger, Ingrid Kolossa-Gehring, Marike Halldórsson, Þórhallur Ingi Article/Letter to editor International Journal of Hygiene and Environmental Health 250 (2023) ISSN: 1438-4639 PFASs : What can we learn from the European Human Biomonitoring Initiative HBM4EU 2023 Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs) were one of the priority substance groups selected which have been investigated under the ambitious European Joint programme HBM4EU (2017–2022). In order to answer policy relevant questions concerning exposure and health effects of PFASs in Europe several activities were developed under HBM4EU namely i) synthesis of HBM data generated in Europe prior to HBM4EU by developing new platforms, ii) development of a Quality Assurance/Quality Control Program covering 12 biomarkers of PFASs, iii) aligned and harmonized human biomonitoring studies of PFASs. In addition, some cohort studies (on mother-child exposure, occupational exposure to hexavalent chromium) were initiated, and literature researches on risk assessment of mixtures of PFAS, health effects and effect biomarkers were performed. The HBM4EU Aligned Studies have generated internal exposure reference levels for 12 PFASs in 1957 European teenagers aged 12–18 years. The results showed that serum levels of 14.3% of the teenagers exceeded 6.9 μg/L PFASs, which corresponds to the EFSA guideline value for a tolerable weekly intake (TWI) of 4.4 ng/kg for some of the investigated PFASs (PFOA, PFOS, PFNA and PFHxS). In Northern and Western Europe, 24% of teenagers exceeded this level. The most relevant sources of exposure identified were drinking water and some foods (fish, eggs, offal and locally produced foods). HBM4EU occupational studies also revealed very high levels of PFASs exposure in workers (P95: 192 μg/L in chrome plating facilities), highlighting the importance of monitoring PFASs exposure in specific workplaces. In addition, environmental contaminated hotspots causing high exposure to the population were identified. In conclusion, the frequent and high PFASs exposure evidenced by HBM4EU strongly suggests the need to take all possible measures to prevent further contamination of the European population, in addition to adopting remediation measures in hotspot areas, to protect human health and the environment. HBM4EU findings also support the restriction of the whole group of PFASs. Further, research and definition for additional toxicological dose-effect relationship values for more PFASs compounds is needed. en application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/pfass-what-can-we-learn-from-the-european-human-biomonitoring-ini 10.1016/j.ijheh.2023.114168 https://edepot.wur.nl/629769 Emerging health risks European teenagers Exposure HBM4EU Human biomonitoring Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Wageningen University & Research |
institution |
WUR NL |
collection |
DSpace |
country |
Países bajos |
countrycode |
NL |
component |
Bibliográfico |
access |
En linea |
databasecode |
dig-wur-nl |
tag |
biblioteca |
region |
Europa del Oeste |
libraryname |
WUR Library Netherlands |
language |
English |
topic |
Emerging health risks European teenagers Exposure HBM4EU Human biomonitoring Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs) Emerging health risks European teenagers Exposure HBM4EU Human biomonitoring Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs) |
spellingShingle |
Emerging health risks European teenagers Exposure HBM4EU Human biomonitoring Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs) Emerging health risks European teenagers Exposure HBM4EU Human biomonitoring Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs) Uhl, Maria Schoeters, Greet Govarts, Eva Bil, Wieneke Fletcher, Tony Haug, Line Småstuen Hoogenboom, Ron Gundacker, Claudia Trier, Xenia Fernandez, Mariana F. Calvo, Argelia Castaño López, Marta Esteban Coertjens, Dries Santonen, Tiina Murínová, Ľubica Palkovičová Richterová, Denisa Brouwere, Katleen De Hauzenberger, Ingrid Kolossa-Gehring, Marike Halldórsson, Þórhallur Ingi PFASs : What can we learn from the European Human Biomonitoring Initiative HBM4EU |
description |
Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs) were one of the priority substance groups selected which have been investigated under the ambitious European Joint programme HBM4EU (2017–2022). In order to answer policy relevant questions concerning exposure and health effects of PFASs in Europe several activities were developed under HBM4EU namely i) synthesis of HBM data generated in Europe prior to HBM4EU by developing new platforms, ii) development of a Quality Assurance/Quality Control Program covering 12 biomarkers of PFASs, iii) aligned and harmonized human biomonitoring studies of PFASs. In addition, some cohort studies (on mother-child exposure, occupational exposure to hexavalent chromium) were initiated, and literature researches on risk assessment of mixtures of PFAS, health effects and effect biomarkers were performed. The HBM4EU Aligned Studies have generated internal exposure reference levels for 12 PFASs in 1957 European teenagers aged 12–18 years. The results showed that serum levels of 14.3% of the teenagers exceeded 6.9 μg/L PFASs, which corresponds to the EFSA guideline value for a tolerable weekly intake (TWI) of 4.4 ng/kg for some of the investigated PFASs (PFOA, PFOS, PFNA and PFHxS). In Northern and Western Europe, 24% of teenagers exceeded this level. The most relevant sources of exposure identified were drinking water and some foods (fish, eggs, offal and locally produced foods). HBM4EU occupational studies also revealed very high levels of PFASs exposure in workers (P95: 192 μg/L in chrome plating facilities), highlighting the importance of monitoring PFASs exposure in specific workplaces. In addition, environmental contaminated hotspots causing high exposure to the population were identified. In conclusion, the frequent and high PFASs exposure evidenced by HBM4EU strongly suggests the need to take all possible measures to prevent further contamination of the European population, in addition to adopting remediation measures in hotspot areas, to protect human health and the environment. HBM4EU findings also support the restriction of the whole group of PFASs. Further, research and definition for additional toxicological dose-effect relationship values for more PFASs compounds is needed. |
format |
Article/Letter to editor |
topic_facet |
Emerging health risks European teenagers Exposure HBM4EU Human biomonitoring Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs) |
author |
Uhl, Maria Schoeters, Greet Govarts, Eva Bil, Wieneke Fletcher, Tony Haug, Line Småstuen Hoogenboom, Ron Gundacker, Claudia Trier, Xenia Fernandez, Mariana F. Calvo, Argelia Castaño López, Marta Esteban Coertjens, Dries Santonen, Tiina Murínová, Ľubica Palkovičová Richterová, Denisa Brouwere, Katleen De Hauzenberger, Ingrid Kolossa-Gehring, Marike Halldórsson, Þórhallur Ingi |
author_facet |
Uhl, Maria Schoeters, Greet Govarts, Eva Bil, Wieneke Fletcher, Tony Haug, Line Småstuen Hoogenboom, Ron Gundacker, Claudia Trier, Xenia Fernandez, Mariana F. Calvo, Argelia Castaño López, Marta Esteban Coertjens, Dries Santonen, Tiina Murínová, Ľubica Palkovičová Richterová, Denisa Brouwere, Katleen De Hauzenberger, Ingrid Kolossa-Gehring, Marike Halldórsson, Þórhallur Ingi |
author_sort |
Uhl, Maria |
title |
PFASs : What can we learn from the European Human Biomonitoring Initiative HBM4EU |
title_short |
PFASs : What can we learn from the European Human Biomonitoring Initiative HBM4EU |
title_full |
PFASs : What can we learn from the European Human Biomonitoring Initiative HBM4EU |
title_fullStr |
PFASs : What can we learn from the European Human Biomonitoring Initiative HBM4EU |
title_full_unstemmed |
PFASs : What can we learn from the European Human Biomonitoring Initiative HBM4EU |
title_sort |
pfass : what can we learn from the european human biomonitoring initiative hbm4eu |
url |
https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/pfass-what-can-we-learn-from-the-european-human-biomonitoring-ini |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT uhlmaria pfasswhatcanwelearnfromtheeuropeanhumanbiomonitoringinitiativehbm4eu AT schoetersgreet pfasswhatcanwelearnfromtheeuropeanhumanbiomonitoringinitiativehbm4eu AT govartseva pfasswhatcanwelearnfromtheeuropeanhumanbiomonitoringinitiativehbm4eu AT bilwieneke pfasswhatcanwelearnfromtheeuropeanhumanbiomonitoringinitiativehbm4eu AT fletchertony pfasswhatcanwelearnfromtheeuropeanhumanbiomonitoringinitiativehbm4eu AT hauglinesmastuen pfasswhatcanwelearnfromtheeuropeanhumanbiomonitoringinitiativehbm4eu AT hoogenboomron pfasswhatcanwelearnfromtheeuropeanhumanbiomonitoringinitiativehbm4eu AT gundackerclaudia pfasswhatcanwelearnfromtheeuropeanhumanbiomonitoringinitiativehbm4eu AT trierxenia pfasswhatcanwelearnfromtheeuropeanhumanbiomonitoringinitiativehbm4eu AT fernandezmarianaf pfasswhatcanwelearnfromtheeuropeanhumanbiomonitoringinitiativehbm4eu AT calvoargeliacastano pfasswhatcanwelearnfromtheeuropeanhumanbiomonitoringinitiativehbm4eu AT lopezmartaesteban pfasswhatcanwelearnfromtheeuropeanhumanbiomonitoringinitiativehbm4eu AT coertjensdries pfasswhatcanwelearnfromtheeuropeanhumanbiomonitoringinitiativehbm4eu AT santonentiina pfasswhatcanwelearnfromtheeuropeanhumanbiomonitoringinitiativehbm4eu AT murinovalubicapalkovicova pfasswhatcanwelearnfromtheeuropeanhumanbiomonitoringinitiativehbm4eu AT richterovadenisa pfasswhatcanwelearnfromtheeuropeanhumanbiomonitoringinitiativehbm4eu AT brouwerekatleende pfasswhatcanwelearnfromtheeuropeanhumanbiomonitoringinitiativehbm4eu AT hauzenbergeringrid pfasswhatcanwelearnfromtheeuropeanhumanbiomonitoringinitiativehbm4eu AT kolossagehringmarike pfasswhatcanwelearnfromtheeuropeanhumanbiomonitoringinitiativehbm4eu AT halldorssonþorhalluringi pfasswhatcanwelearnfromtheeuropeanhumanbiomonitoringinitiativehbm4eu |
_version_ |
1819141678738440192 |