| Literature DB >> 21255392 |
Annette Prüss-Ustün1, Carolyn Vickers, Pascal Haefliger, Roberto Bertollini.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Continuous exposure to many chemicals, including through air, water, food, or other media and products results in health impacts which have been well assessed, however little is known about the total disease burden related to chemicals. This is important to know for overall policy actions and priorities. In this article the known burden related to selected chemicals or their mixtures, main data gaps, and the link to public health policy are reviewed.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21255392 PMCID: PMC3037292 DOI: 10.1186/1476-069X-10-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health ISSN: 1476-069X Impact factor: 5.984
Figure 1Human exposure to chemicals throughout their life-cycle and selected programmes relevant to their prevention
Examples of sources and pathways of human exposure to a few selected chemicals
| Exposure media | Example sources of exposure and exposure pathways | Examples of chemicals |
|---|---|---|
| Outdoor air | Inhalation of toxic gases and particles from vehicle and industrial emissions, or naturally occurring sources such as volcanic emission or forest fires. | Sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, ozone, suspended particulate matter, lead, benzene, dioxins and dioxins-like compounds |
| Indoor air | Inhalation of pollutants released during indoor combustion of solid fuels, tobacco smoking, or from construction materials and furnishings, contaminants in indoor air and dust. | Suspended particulate matter, nitrous oxide, sulfur oxides, carbon monoxide, formaldehyde, polyaromatic hydrocarbons (PAH), mercury, lead dust from lead-based paints, benzene, asbestos, mycotoxins, phtalates, polybrominated diphenyl ether fire retardants (PBDEs) |
| Drinking water | Ingestion of drinking water contaminated with toxic chemicals from industrial effluents, human dwellings, agricultural runoff, oil and mining wastes, or from natural sources. | Pesticides, herbicides, fertilisers, metals (copper, lead, mercury, selenium, chromium), arsenic, fluoride, nitrate, cyanide, industrial solvents, petroleum products, disinfection by-products. |
| Food | Consumption of food contaminated with chemicals at toxic levels through agricultural practices, industrial processes, environmental contamination, and natural toxins. | Pesticides, methylmercury, lead, cadmium, dioxins, aflatoxin. |
| Non-food consumer products | Exposure by ingestion, inhalation or dermal exposure to toxic chemicals contained in toys, jewellery and decoration items, textiles, or food containers, consumer chemical products | Lead, mercury, cadmium, phthalates, formaldehyde, dyes, fungicides or pesticides. |
| Soil | Ingestion (particularly for children) or inhalation of soil contaminated through industrial processes, agricultural processes or inadequate household and industrial waste management. | heavy metals, pesticides, and persistent organic pollutants. |
| Occupational exposure | Chronic or acute exposures through inhalation, dermal absorption, or secondary ingestion of toxic chemicals or by-products of industrial processes such as agriculture, mining or manufacturing. | Pesticides, benzene, heavy metals, solvents, suspended particulate matter. |
| Human to human | Foetal exposure to toxic chemicals during pregnancy (through placental barrier) or through consumption of contaminated breast milk. | Heavy metals, pesticides, benzene, etc. |
Main disease groups with suspected or confirmed linkage to chemicals
| Diseases/disease groups | Examples of exposures | |
|---|---|---|
| Respiratory infections and chronic respiratory diseases | Occupational exposures to dusts, gases, irritant chemicals, fumes | Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) [ |
| Second-hand smoke; occupational exposures to cleaning-agents, pesticides, hairdressing chemicals etc. | Asthma onset and exacerbation [ | |
| Second-hand smoke | Acute lower respiratory infections [ | |
| Occupational exposure to asbestos Metal dusts, particulate matter | Asbestosis Bronchitis, pneumoconiosis, silicosis | |
| Perinatal conditions | Maternal exposure to pesticides or other chemicals | Low-birth-weight and preterm infants [ |
| Congenital anomalies | Maternal exposure to pesticides, polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), polychlorinated dibenzofurans (PCDFs), lead, mercury, other endocrine disruptors | Various birth defects [ |
| Diseases of the blood | Lead, arsine, naphthalene, benzene | Anaemia, methaemoglobinemia |
| Cancers | Occupational exposures to carcinogens, aflatoxins in food, second-hand smoke, outdoor air pollution by carbon particles associated with polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, asbestos, arsenic; volatile organic compounds such as benzene, pesticides, dioxins. etc. | Numerous cancer sites, including of the lung, skin, liver, brain, kidney, prostate, bone marrow, bladder [ |
| Neuropsychiatric and developmental disorders | Lead, methylmercury, polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), arsenic, toluene etc. | Cognitive development, mental retardation, Parkinson disease, Attention-deficit disorder, Minamata disease [ |
| Sense organ diseases | Carbon disulfide, mercury, lead | Hearing loss |
| Cardiovascular diseases | Ultrafine particles in polluted air, lead, arsenic, cadmium, mercury, pollutant gases, solvents, pesticides, second-hand smoke | Ischaemic heart disease, cerebrovascular disease [ |
| Diabetes mellitus | Arsenic, N-3-pyridylmethyl-N'-p-nitrophenyl urea (rodenticide), 2,3,7,8-Tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin. | Diabetes Type II [ |
| Systemic auto immune diseases | Crystaline silica dust | Systemic sclerosis, systemic lupus erythematosus, rheumatoid arthritis, systemic small vessel vasculitis [ |
| Endocrine diseases | Ethanol, hexachlorobenzene | Porphyria |
| Genito-urinary diseases | Beryllium, cadmium, lead | Calculus of kidney, chronic renal disease |
| Digestive diseases | Ethanol, chloroform, carbon tetrachloride, manganese | Hepatitis, cholestasis, pancreatitis |
| Skin diseases | Antiseptics, aromatic amines, cement, dyes, formaldehyde, artificial fertilizers, cutting oils, fragrances, glues, lanolins, latex, metals, pesticides, potassium dichromate, preservatives | Atopic dermatitis, allergic and irritant contact dermatitis, chloracne, hyperkeratosis [ |
| Musculoskeletal diseases | Cadmium, lead | Osteoporosis, gout |
| Oral conditions | Fluoride | Dental fluorosis |
| Poisonings | Accidental ingestion of household products, occupational exposures and accidents, intentional self-harm by ingestion of pesticides | Unintentional poisonings, self-inflicted injuries [ |
Overview of available disease burden estimates attributable to chemicals
| Chemicals/Groups of chemicals | Disease outcomes considered (attributable fraction) | Deaths | DALYs‡ | Main limitations¤ | Data year/method§ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chemicals (including drugs) involved in unintentional acute poisonings (methanol, diethylene glycol, kerosene, pesticides etc.) | Unintentional poisonings (71%) | 240,000a | 5,246,000a | Limited to preventable poisonings. Total unintentional poisonings would amount to 346,000 deaths and 7,445,000 DALYs[ | 2004; C [ |
| Chemicals involved in unintentional occupational poisonings | Unintentional poisonings (occupational) (8.6%) | 30,000c | 643,000c | - | 2004; A [ |
| Pesticides pesticides involved in self-inflicted injuries | Self-inflicted injuries (23%) | 186,000 | 4,420,000 | Limited to preventable self inflicted injuries. Impact of accidental and chronic exposures not considered. | 2002; C [ |
| Asbestos | Malignant mesothelioma (NA); trachea, bronchus, lung cancer (0.3%); asbestosis (NA) | 107,000d | 1,523,000d | - | 2004; A [ |
| Occupational lung carcinogens (arsenic, asbestos, beryllium, cadmium, chromium, diesel exhaust, nickel, silica) | Trachea, bronchus, lung cancer (8.6%) | 111,000 | 1,011,000 | Only 8 of the chemicals or chemical mixtures classified as carcinogenic or probably carcinogenic to humans taken into account | 2004; A [ |
| Occupational leukaemogens (benzene, ethylene oxide, ionizing radiation) | Leukaemia (2.3%) | 7,400e | 113,000e | Only 2 of the chemicals or chemical mixtures classified as carcinogenic or probably carcinogenic to humans taken into account | 2004; A [ |
| Occupational particulates - causing COPD (dusts, fumes/gas) | COPD (13%) | 375,000f | 3,804,000f | - | 2004; A [ |
| Occupational particulates - other respiratory diseases than COPD (silica, asbestos and coal mine dust) | Asbestosis (NA); silicosis (NA); pneumoconiosis (NA) | 29,000 | 1,062,000 | - | 2004; A [ |
| Outdoor air pollutants (particulate matter, sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, benzo[a]pyrene, benzene, others) | Lung cancer (7.9%); acute respiratory infections (1.6%); selected cardiopulmonary diseases (3.4%) | 1,152,000 | 8,747,000 | Only urban air pollution in cities with >100 000 inhabitants taken into account. Health impact from rural air pollution unknown. | 2004; A [ |
| Outdoor air pollutants emitted from ships (particulate matter, sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, benzo[a]pyrene, benzene, others) | Lung cancer (0.3%); selected cardiopulmonary diseases (0.4%) | 60,000g | NA | - | 2002; B [ |
| Indoor air pollutants from solid fuel combustion (carbon monoxide, nitrogen oxides, sulfur oxides, benzene, formaldehyde, polyaromatic compounds, particulates, others) | Lung cancer (2.9%); acute respiratory infections (33%); COPD (33%) | 1,965,000 | 41,009,000 | Disease burden from emissions from building materials and household products is not know. BoD from second hand smoke has been evaluated separately. | 2004; A [ |
| Second-hand smoke (nicotine, formaldehyde, carbon monoxide, phenols, nitrogen oxides, naphthalenes, tar, nitrosamine, PAHs, vinyl chloride, various metals, hydrogen cyanide, ammonia, others) | Lower respiratory infections (6.3%); otitis (1.7%); asthma (11%); lung cancer (1.8%); ischaemic heart disease (4.5%) | 603,000 | 10,913,000 | - | 2004; B [ |
| Lead | Mild mental retardation; Cardiovascular diseases | 143,000 | 8,977,000 | - | 2004; A [ |
| Arsenic in drinking-water | Diabetes mellitus (0.04%) ischemic heart disease (0,11%); lung cancer (0.25%); bladder cancer (1.2%); kidney cancer (NA); skin cancer (0.30%) | 9,100a | 125,000a | Limited to exposure through drinking water. Limited to Bangladesh. | 2001; B [ |
| Total #,h Total in children <15 years | All considered diseases | 4,879,000 (8.3%) 1,073,000 (22%) | 86,200,000 (5.7%) 46,627,000 (54%) | Mainly 2004; A | |
‡ DALYs are "Disability-adjusted life years", a weighted measure of years of life lost due to premature death, and years lived with disability. ¤ Only outcomes qualified as strong evidence were considered. § Methods: A: Comparative Risk Assessment (CRA); B: Based on exposure and exposure-response (similar to CRA); C: Evidence synthesis and expert evaluation. # The estimates were developed within three years and their pooling is unlikely to introduce a significant error. NA: not available. -: none.
a Estimate not compared to counterfactual exposure, which is however estimated to be negligible using a theoretical minimum exposure given available management options for concerned chemicals.
b Values updated for 2004 based on original reference.
c Already included in total unintentional acute poisonings and therefore not included again in the total.
d Lung cancer and asbestosis caused by asbestos are also considered in occupational lung carcinogens and particulates and this part of the burden is therefore not counted twice in the total.
e Also includes a small fraction of leukaemia caused by ionizing radiation.
f Parts of the particulates are organic in nature, and the estimate therefore includes a small fraction that is not or not directly related to chemicals
g Overlaps with the burden from outdoor air pollution and is therefore not included in the total.
h Total is corrected for double counting (chemicals considered in more than one estimate); not all disease burdens are however additive, and joint exposures could lead to slight overestimate (see Methods section).
Figure 2Distribution of known burden of disease (in DALYs)
Figure 3Occurrence and detection of health impacts from chemicals Adapted from [64,65]