| Literature DB >> 21410986 |
Lesliam Quirós-Alcalá1, Asa Bradman, Marcia Nishioka, Martha E Harnly, Alan Hubbard, Thomas E McKone, Jeannette Ferber, Brenda Eskenazi.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Studies report that residential use of pesticides in low-income homes is common because of poor housing conditions and pest infestations; however, exposure data on contemporary-use pesticides in low-income households is limited. We conducted a study in low-income homes from urban and agricultural communities to: characterize and compare house dust levels of agricultural and residential-use pesticides; evaluate the correlation of pesticide concentrations in samples collected several days apart; examine whether concentrations of pesticides phased-out for residential uses, but still used in agriculture (i.e., chlorpyrifos and diazinon) have declined in homes in the agricultural community; and estimate resident children's pesticide exposures via inadvertent dust ingestion.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21410986 PMCID: PMC3071308 DOI: 10.1186/1476-069X-10-19
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health ISSN: 1476-069X Impact factor: 5.984
Demographic and household characteristics for study participants from farmworker homes in Salinas, CA and urban homes in Oakland, CA.a
| Salinas farmworker | Oakland urban homes | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Maternal education (highest grade completed) | ||||
| < completed 9th grade or lower | 8 | (53.3) | 8 | (61.5) |
| Grades 10-12 (no diploma) | 3 | (20.0) | 1 | (7.7) |
| High school diploma/GED or technical school | 2 | (13.3) | 4 | (30.8) |
| College graduate | 2 | (13.3) | --- | |
| Paternal education (highest grade completed) | ||||
| < completed 9 th grade or lower | 12 | (85.7) | 10 | (83.3) |
| Grades 10-12 (no diploma) | 1 | (7.1) | 1 | (8.3) |
| High school diploma/GED or technical school | 1 | (7.1) | 1 | (8.3) |
| College graduate | --- | --- | ||
| Family income relative to federal poverty levelb | ||||
| ≤ Poverty level | 10 | (66.7) | 9 | (69.2) |
| > Poverty level but <200% poverty level | 5 | (33.3) | 4 | (30.8) |
| Number of household members | ||||
| 3-5 | 8 | (53.3) | 5 | (38.5) |
| > 6 | 7 | (46.7) | 8 | (61.5) |
| Reported rodent sighting in the home | ||||
| Yes | 2 | (13.3) | 3 | (23.1) |
| No | 13 | (86.7) | 10 | (76.9) |
| Reported cockroach sighting in the home | ||||
| Yes | 3 | (20.0) | 5 | (38.5) |
| No | 12 | (80.0) | 8 | (61.5) |
| Reported pesticide application in the last 3 months | ||||
| Yes | 10 | (66.7) | 11 | (84.6) |
| No | 5 | (33.3) | 2 | (15.4) |
| Farmworkers wore work clothing indoorsc | ||||
| Yes | 12 | (80.0) | --- | |
| No | 2 | (20.0) | ||
| Farmworkers wore work shoes indoorsc | ||||
| Yes | 7 | (50.0) | --- | |
| No | 7 | (50.0) | ||
| Farmworkers living in the home (past 3 months) | ||||
| 0 | --- | 11 | (84.6)d | |
| 1-3 | 15 | (100.0) | 2 | (15.4) |
| Farmworkers currently living in the home | ||||
| 0 | 1 | (6.7) | --- | |
| 1-3 | 11 | (73.3) | --- | |
| 4-7 | 3 | (20.0) | --- | |
| Distance of home to nearest field/orchard | ||||
| 50-20 feet | 1 | (6.7) | --- | |
| > 200 feet-1/4 mile | 3 | (20.0) | --- | |
| > 1/4 mile | 11 | (73.3) | --- | |
a. No statistically significant differences were observed between locations for demographic factors unrelated to farmworker status. b. Families' poverty levels were based on U.S. Department of Health and Human Services thresholds for 2006. Source: http://aspe.hhs.gov/POVERTY/06poverty.shtml. c. One participant in the Salinas group reported that the father was a farmworker during the eligibility screening; however, the father was not living in the home during the sample collection period so information is only available for 14 of the 15 farmworker households for this demographic characteristic. d. Two participants reported having a parent or parent's sibling working in a field/golf course doing maintenance/landscaping work potentially involving pesticide use; however, they were not doing this work during sample collection.
Limits of detection and summary statistics for pesticide dust concentrations (ng/g) in samples collected in 2006 from low-income farmworker and urban homes.a,b
| Diazinon | 4 | 79 | -- | 8.21 | 14.4 | 18 | 35.8 | 56.4 | 52 | -- | -- | 6.98 | 18.1 | 133 | 139 |
| Chlorpyrifos | 10 | 55 | -- | -- | 21.9 | 28 | 135 | 200 | 36 | -- | -- | -- | 34.9 | 43.7 | 56.4 |
| Malathion | 10 | 7 | -- | -- | -- | -- | 52.2 | 70.8 | 12 | -- | -- | -- | -- | 877 | 1160 |
| Tetrachlorvinphos | 50 | 10 | -- | -- | -- | -- | 252 | 271 | 4 | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | 15.8 |
| Diazinon-oxon | 4 | ND | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | 4 | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | 4.73 |
| Methidathion | 10 | ND | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | ND | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- |
| Methyl Parathion | 10 | ND | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | ND | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- |
| Phorate | 10 | ND | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | ND | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- |
| cis-permethrin | 4 | 100 | 45.9 | 84.9 | 568 | 908 | 5930c | 6300c | 100 | 11.6 | 84.4 | 291 | 946 | 21600 | 26700 |
| trans-permethrin | 4 | 100 | 88.4 | 144 | 952 | 1380 | 9170c | 9690c | 100 | 18.4 | 166 | 504 | 1620 | 36400 | 46800 |
| Allethrind | 10 | 83 | -- | 18.4 | 57.1 | 129 | 652c | 694 | 80 | -- | 20.376 | 50.5 | 158 | 276 | 289 |
| Cypermethrine | 20 | 55 | -- | -- | 230 | 918 | 4540 | 13500 | 64 | -- | -- | 587 | 1050 | 5990 | 13100 |
| Bifenthrin | 10 | 14 | -- | -- | -- | -- | 23.8 | 23.9 | 44 | -- | -- | -- | 45 | 2050 | 2120 |
| Sumithrin | 10 | 24 | -- | -- | -- | -- | 591 | 807 | 8 | -- | -- | -- | -- | 104 | 116 |
| Deltamethrin | 250 | 17 | -- | -- | -- | -- | 3780 | 5590 | 12 | -- | -- | -- | -- | 13000 | 16300 |
| Imiprothrin | 50 | 7 | -- | -- | -- | -- | 253 | 2140 | 4 | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | 160 |
| Prallethrin | 2 | ND | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | 4 | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | 33.6 |
| Esfenvalerate | 50 | 3 | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | 66.5 | ND | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- |
| Piperonyl butoxidef | 2 | 86 | -- | 30.9 | 92.3 | 283 | 9060 | 9350 | 96 | -- | 51.6 | 353 | 751 | 40300 | 46600 |
| Chlorthal-dimethylg | 2 | 97 | -- | 13.3 | 16.3 | 23.5 | 34.1 | 34.8 | ND | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- |
| Iprodioneh | 100 | ND | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | ND | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- |
a. Two samples were obtained from each home in both locations except for one home in each location due to inadequate sample volume. b. Samples were collected from carpets or area rugs with the exception of three samples from two farmworker homes which were collected from furniture due to the absence of a carpet. c. Denotes that the reported concentration was observed in a furniture sample. d. Reported as the sum of two isomers (cis/trans) isomers. e. Reported as the sum of four isomers. f. Insecticide synergist. g. Phthalate herbicide h. Dicarboximide fungicide. Abbreviations and notation: LOD = limit of detection; DF = detection frequency (based on the number of samples obtained); ND or '--' indicates that analyte was not detected or detected
Spearman rank-order correlation coefficients for dust concentrations between the first and second collections for the most frequently detected analytes.a
| Analyte | Salinas | Oakland | All |
|---|---|---|---|
| Spearman rho | |||
| Organophosphates | |||
| Diazinon | 0.88** | 0.97** | 0.92* |
| Chlorpyrifos | 0.83** | -- | -- |
| Pyrethroids | |||
| cis-permethrin | 0.78** | 1.00** | 0.91** |
| trans-permethrin | 0.70** | 1.00** | 0.90** |
| Allethrin | 0.49 | 0.18 | 0.36 |
| Cypermethrin | 0.87** | 0.89** | 0.89** |
| Synergist Ingredient | |||
| Piperonyl butoxide | 0.77* | 0.97** | 0.89** |
| Phthalate Herbicide | |||
| Chlorthal-dimethyl | 0.78* | -- | -- |
a. Only those homes for which we were able to measure analytes in both dust samples were included in these analyses. b. Spearman correlation coefficients are only provided when analyte DF≥50% in respective locations at each collection. c. Correlation coefficients for all homes are provided when analyte DF≥50% in both locations and collections. ** p ≤ 0.0001, * p < 0.01
Figure 1Median chlorpyrifos and diazinon dust concentrations in samples from farmworker homes in the city of Salinas, CA by year of collection and kilograms applied (trendline) at the county-level (Monterey County) for agricultural purposes from 1999-2007. † In December 2001 and 2002, residential products containing chlorpyrifos and diazinon, respectively were canceled. ‡Technical registrants were to buy back existing products from retailers by the end of December 2004. * Indicates that study had significantly higher dust concentrations compared to those observed in farmworker homes sampled in the present study (Wilcoxon Mann-Whitney tests, p < 0.05). ** CHAMACOS refers to the Center for the Health Assessment of Mothers and Children of Salinas longitudinal birth cohort study (Harnly et al. 2009).
Kilograms of diazinon and chlorpyrifos applied in Monterey county from 1999-2007 for non-agricultural applications.a,b
| Year | Diazinon (kgs) | Chlorpyrifos (kgs) |
|---|---|---|
| 1999 | 717 | 1519 |
| 2000 | 841 | 678 |
| 2001 | 1301 | 355 |
| 2002 | 1094 | 760 |
| 2003 | 1076 | 101 |
| 2004 | 217 | 18 |
| 2005 | 96 | 54 |
| 2006 | 6 | 3 |
| 2007 | 2 | <0.5 |
a. Pounds applied at the county level are reported by year by the California Department of Pesticide Regulation in their Pesticide Use Reporting (PUR) database. Pounds reported in the database were converted to kilograms. b. Non-agricultural applications refer to uses such as landscape maintenance, public health, commodity fumigation, rights-of-way, and structural pest control applications by licensed applicators. Source: California Department of Pesticide Regulation Pesticide Use Regulation Database. Available at: http://www.cdpr.ca.gov/docs/pur/purmain.htm
Summary statistics on the estimated intake and hazard quotients (HQ) for all study children.a
| Select Summary Statistics for HQs based on | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Analyte | RfD | # samples | Range of Intake | p50 | p75 | p95 | Max | |
| Organophosphates | ||||||||
| diazinon | 0.0002 | 36 | -- | 7.0 × 10-07 | 2.5 × 10-04 | 4.3 × 10-04 | 1.6 × 10-03 | 3.5 × 10-03 |
| chlorpyrifos | 0.00003 | 25 | -- | 1.1 ×10-06 | -- | 4.9 × 10-03 | 2.3 × 10-02 | 3.8 × 10-02 |
| malathion | 0.07 | 5 | -- | 4.9 × 10-06 | -- | -- | 2.8 × 10-06 | 7.0 × 10-05 |
| tetrachlorvinphos | 0.04 | 4 | -- | 1.5 × 10-06 | -- | -- | 2.2 × 10-05 | 3.9 × 10-05 |
| Pyrethroids | ||||||||
| cis-permethrind | 0.25 | 54 | 5.4 × 10-08 | 1.3 × 10-04 | 9.7 × 10-06 | 2.0 × 10-05 | 8.4 × 10-05 | 5.1 × 10-04 |
| trans-permethrind | 0.25 | 54 | 8.6 × 10-08 | 2.2 × 10-04 | 1.7 × 10-05 | 3.2 × 10-05 | 1.6 × 10-04 | 8.9 × 10-04 |
| cypermethrin | 0.06 | 32 | -- | 6.4 × 10-05 | 2.5 ×10-05 | 8.4 × 10-05 | 4.8 × 10-04 | 1.1 × 10-03 |
| bifenthrin | 0.015 | 15 | -- | 1.1 × 10-05 | -- | 4.4 × 10-06 | 2.6 × 10-05 | 7.5 × 10-04 |
| sumithrin | 0.0007 | 9 | -- | 3.7 × 10-06 | -- | -- | 3.2 × 10-03 | 5.2 × 10-03 |
| deltamethrin | 0.0033 | 8 | -- | 9.0 × 10-05 | -- | -- | 6.7 × 10-03 | 2.7 × 10-02 |
| prallethrin | 0.025 | 1 | -- | 1.9 × 10-07 | -- | -- | -- | 7.4 × 10-06 |
| esfenvalerate | 0.02 | 1 | -- | 4.4 × 10-07 | -- | -- | -- | 2.2 × 10-05 |
| Others | ||||||||
| chlorthal-dimethyl | 0.01 | 28 | -- | 1.8 × 10-07 | 3.0 × 10-06 | 7.2 × 10-06 | 1.5 × 10-05 | 1.8 × 10-05 |
| piperonyl butoxide | 0.16 | 49 | -- | 2.2 × 10-04 | 5.0 × 10-06 | 1.7 × 10-05 | 2.5 × 10-04 | 1.4 × 10-03 |
a. A hazard quotient (HQ) was calculated as the ratio of the potential dust intake to the respective analyte reference dose (RfD). The HQ was only calculated for those analytes for which an RfD was available. b. Chronic population adjusted doses (cPADs) were used as the reference dose for chlorpyrifos (cPAD for children and females 13-50 years of age) and deltamethrin. Sources: IRIS database http://cfpub.epa.gov/ncea/iris/index.cfm?fuseaction=iris.showSubstanceList and EPA's Pesticide Registration Status: http://www.epa.gov/opp00001/reregistration/status.htm. c. Intake was calculated by multiplying the toxicant dust concentration by an ingestion rate of 0.10 g/day (100 mg/day) then dividing by the child-specific body weight (kg). d. The RfD available for "permethrin" was used for each individual isomer in our calculations. Notation: '--' Value is not reported since dust concentrations were less than the limit of detection.
Dust concentrations for select organophosphorous pesticides and pyrethroids from select U.S. farmworker studies (ng/g).a
| Author | Population | Location | Collection method | Sampling Dates | Pesticides | LOD (ng/g)b | DF% | n | Range (ng/g) | Median | Mean (SD) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Harnly et al. 2009c | Farmworkers (CHAMACOS longitudinal birth cohort) | Salinas Valley, CA | HVS3 | 2000-2002 | Organophosphates: | ||||||
| Chlorpyrifos | 2 | 91 | 177-197 | 2.9-7850 | 74 | NR | |||||
| Diazinon | 2 | 86 | 4.7-2870 | 26 | |||||||
| Pyrethroids: | |||||||||||
| cis-Permethrin | 5 | 98 | 16-168000 | 344 | |||||||
| trans-Permethrin | 5 | 98 | 146-265000 | 467 | |||||||
| Others: | |||||||||||
| Chlorthal-dimethyl | 2 | 98 | 2.3-271 | 22 | |||||||
| Bradman et al. 2006d | Farmworkers | Salinas Valley, CA | HVS3 | June-September 2002 | Organophosphates: | ||||||
| Chlorpyrifos | 2 | 95 | 20 | <LOD-1200 | 49 | NR | |||||
| Diazinon | 100 | 4-810 | 21 | ||||||||
| Malathion | 20 | <LOD-480 | NR | ||||||||
| Pyrethroids: | |||||||||||
| cis-Permethrin | 100 | 13-2900 | 150 | ||||||||
| trans-Permethrin | 100 | 22-5800 | 230 | ||||||||
| Others: | |||||||||||
| Chlorthal-dimethy | 100 | 6.5-110 | 31 | ||||||||
| Rothlein et al. 2006 | Farmworkers | Hood River, OR | HVS3 | Summer 1999 | Chlorpyrifos | 10 | 92 | 26 | <LOD-1200 | 130 | 200(240) |
| Diazinon | 10 | 77 | <LOD-720 | 310 | 310(230) | ||||||
| Malathion | 10 | 81 | <LOD-1400 | 180 | 380(400) | ||||||
| Curl et al. 2002 | Agricultural Workers | Yakima Valley, Washington State | Nilfisk vacuum cleaner | June-September 1999 | Chlorpyrifos | 150 | 26 | 156 | <LOD-2560 | 50 | NR |
| Diazinon | 170 | 3.8 | <LOD-770 | 10 | |||||||
| Malathion | 160 | 15 | <LOD-1030 | 40 | |||||||
| Fenske et al. 2002e | Ag (at least one family member employed as an orchard applicator (APP) or farmworker (FW)) | Central Washington State (major tree fruit production region) | HVS3 | May-July 1995 | Chlorpyrifos | LOQ: 13-27(varied batch to batch) | APP: 100 | APP: 49 | APP: 10-2600 | APP: 370 FW: 250 | APP: 550(580) FW: 270(180) |
| Simcox et al. 1995 | Farmers (F), Farmworkers (FW)e | Wenatchi area (eastern Washington State) | HVS3 | Jan-July 1992 | Chlorpyrifos | LOD: 20 ng/mL | F: 96 FW:100 | F: 26 FW: 22 | F: <LOD-3585 | F: 372 FW: 172 | F: 506 |
a. Other studies may have measured additional analytes; only those relevant to the ones measured in our study are included. b. Unless otherwise indicated, limits of detection (LODs) are in ng/g. In some cases a limit of quantitation (LOQ) was reported instead of an LOD. c. Other analytes were also measured, but detection frequencies were <50%. Analytes included: malathion, methidathion, and iprodione. Minimum value reported in the "Range" column is the lowest quantified concentration. d. Other analytes were also measured, but detection frequencies were <50%. Analytes included allethrin, bifenthrin, cypermethrin, deltamethrin, esfenvalerate, sumithrin, and iprodione. Malathion had a detection frequency <50% in this study, but respective information is presented for comparison with other farmworker studies. e. Also included a reference population, but information is not provided in this table. SD = Standard deviation; NR: Value not reported;