| Literature DB >> 28934097 |
Craig J McGowan1, Richard K Kwok1, Lawrence S Engel1,2, Mark R Stenzel3, Patricia A Stewart4, Dale P Sandler1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The large quantities of chemical oil dispersants used in the oil spill response and cleanup (OSRC) work following the Deepwater Horizon disaster provide an opportunity to study associations between dispersant exposure (Corexit™ EC9500A or EC9527A) and human health.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28934097 PMCID: PMC5915187 DOI: 10.1289/EHP1677
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health Perspect ISSN: 0091-6765 Impact factor: 9.031
Enrollment characteristics of each analysis population.
| Characteristic | Respiratory analysis group | Eye irritation analysis group | Dermal analysis group | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dispersant exposure( | No dispersant exposure( | Dispersant exposure( | No dispersant exposure( | Dispersant exposure( | No dispersant exposure( | |
| Age at enrollment, years | ||||||
| | 532 (24%) | 5,182 (20%) | 543 (24%) | 5,285 (19%) | 187 (18%) | 5,241 (20%) |
| 30–45 years | 911 (42%) | 9,861 (37%) | 932 (42%) | 10,130 (37%) | 458 (44%) | 9,882 (37%) |
| | 735 (34%) | 11,415 (43%) | 763 (34%) | 11,815 (43%) | 394 (38%) | 11,497 (43%) |
| Gender | ||||||
| Male | 1,961 (90%) | 21,137 (80%) | 2,014 (90%) | 21,735 (80%) | 962 (93%) | 21,153 (79%) |
| Female | 217 (10%) | 5,321 (20%) | 224 (10%) | 5,495 (20%) | 77 (7%) | 5,467 (21%) |
| Race | ||||||
| White | 952 (44%) | 18,105 (68%) | 976 (44%) | 18,501 (68%) | 481 (46%) | 17,861 (67%) |
| Black | 986 (45%) | 5,701 (22%) | 1,011 (45%) | 5,918 (22%) | 411 (40%) | 5,983 (22%) |
| Other | 240 (11%) | 2,652 (10%) | 251 (11%) | 2,811 (10%) | 147 (14%) | 2,776 (10%) |
| Education | ||||||
| High school education or less | 1,318 (61%) | 11,741 (44%) | 1,355 (61%) | 12,195 (45%) | 625 (60%) | 11,946 (45%) |
| Greater than high school education | 860 (39%) | 14,717 (56%) | 883 (39%) | 15,035 (55%) | 414 (40%) | 14,674 (55%) |
| Maximum total hydrocarbon exposure, ppm | ||||||
| | 28 (1%) | 5,040 (19%) | 28 (1%) | 5,136 (19%) | – | – |
| 0.3–0.99 | 369 (17%) | 6,857 (26%) | 373 (17%) | 7,050 (26%) | – | – |
| 1.0–2.99 | 635 (29%) | 5,966 (23%) | 658 (29%) | 6,147 (23%) | – | – |
| | 1,146 (53%) | 1,949 (7%) | 1,179 (53%) | 2,002 (7%) | – | – |
| Exposed to decontamination chemicals | ||||||
| Yes | 1,612 (74%) | 5,068 (19%) | 1,656 (74%) | 5,254 (19%) | – | – |
| No | 566 (26%) | 21,390 (81%) | 582 (26%) | 21,976 (81%) | – | – |
| Residential proximity to spill | ||||||
| Directly affected county | 1,301 (60%) | 14,208 (54%) | 1,338 (60%) | 14,705 (54%) | – | – |
| Indirectly affected county | 163 (7%) | 1,717 (6%) | 164 (7%) | 1,778 (7%) | – | – |
| Other Gulf state county | 465 (21%) | 5,434 (21%) | 483 (22%) | 5,582 (20%) | – | – |
| Non–Gulf state residence | 249 (11%) | 5,099 (19%) | 253 (11%) | 5,165 (19%) | – | – |
| Smoking status | ||||||
| | 229 (11%) | 2,687 (10%) | 233 (10%) | 2,768 (10%) | – | – |
| | 629 (29%) | 4,888 (18%) | 640 (29%) | 5,057 (19%) | – | – |
| Former smoker | 357 (16%) | 5,865 (22%) | 369 (16%) | 6,022 (22%) | – | – |
| Never smoker | 963 (44%) | 13,018 (49%) | 996 (45%) | 13,383 (49%) | – | – |
| Preexisting lung condition | ||||||
| Yes | 263 (12%) | 3,186 (12%) | – | – | – | – |
| No | 1,915 (88%) | 23,272 (88%) | – | – | – | – |
| Any relevant PPE use | ||||||
| Yes | 777 (48%) | 2,149 (21%) | – | – | 1,012 (97%) | 13,284 (89%) |
| No | 839 (52%) | 8,196 (79%) | – | – | 27 (3%) | 1,684 (11%) |
| Skin or clothing contact with oil/tar | ||||||
| Yes | – | – | – | – | 1,006 (97%) | 8,306 (31%) |
| No | – | – | – | – | 33 (3%) | 18,314 (69%) |
| Skin or clothing contact with decontamination chemicals | ||||||
| Yes | – | – | – | – | 624 (60%) | 1,434 (5%) |
| No | – | – | – | – | 415 (40%) | 25,186 (95%) |
Note: PPE, personal protective equipment.
Dashes (–) indicate variables that were not examined as covariates in that analysis population.
for respiratory analysis population, for dermal analysis population.
Symptoms at spill response associated with dispersant exposure (GuLF STUDY, 2011–2013).
| Symptom | Exposed [ | Unexposed [ | aPR (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cough | 534 (25%) | 2,642 (10%) | 1.41 (1.28, 1.55) |
| Wheeze | 426 (20%) | 2,050 (8%) | 1.36 (1.23, 1.52) |
| Tightness in chest | 305 (14%) | 1,248 (5%) | 1.58 (1.38, 1.81) |
| Shortness of breath | 387 (18%) | 1,827 (7%) | 1.41 (1.26, 1.58) |
| Burning in nose, throat, lungs | 367 (17%) | 1,325 (5%) | 1.61 (1.42, 1.83) |
| Burning eyes | 512 (23%) | 2,261 (8%) | 1.49 (1.35, 1.64) |
| Itching eyes | 659 (29%) | 3,362 (12%) | 1.35 (1.24, 1.46) |
| Skin irritation | 548 (53%) | 4,345 (16%) | 1.34 (1.25, 1.43) |
Note: aPR, adjusted prevalence ratio; CI, confidence interval.
All models adjusted for gender, age, race, education. Skin irritation models further adjusted for contact with oil/tar, contact with cleaning chemicals, and dispersant/oil interaction. Respiratory and eye irritation models at spill further adjusted for smoking, residential proximity to oil spill, level of oil exposure (total hydrocarbons, THC), use of decontamination chemicals, and preexisting lung disease (respiratory models).
(2,178 exposed, 26,458 unexposed).
(2,238 exposed, 27,230 unexposed).
(1,039 exposed, 26,620 unexposed).
Respiratory and eye irritation symptoms at the time of spill response associated with dispersant exposure, differentiating exposure by direct or indirect exposure (GuLF STUDY 2011–2013).
| Outcome | Direct work with dispersants | Indirect work with dispersants |
|---|---|---|
| PR | PR | |
| Cough | 1.47 (1.31, 1.63) | 1.29 (1.13, 1.47) |
| Wheeze | 1.45 (1.28, 1.63) | 1.17 (1.01, 1.36) |
| Tightness in chest | 1.74 (1.48, 2.04) | 1.30 (1.07, 1.58) |
| Shortness of breath | 1.63 (1.43, 1.85) | 1.07 (0.90, 1.27) |
| Burning in nose/throat/lungs | 1.75 (1.52, 2.02) | 1.30 (1.09, 1.55) |
| Burning eyes | 1.58 (1.41, 1.76) | 1.28 (1.12, 1.47) |
| Itchy eyes | 1.39 (1.27, 1.52) | 1.17 (1.05, 1.31) |
Note: CI, confidence interval; PR, prevalence ratio.
Adjusted for gender, age, race, education, smoking, residential proximity to oil spill, level of oil exposure (total hydrocarbons, THC), use of decontamination chemicals, and preexisting lung disease (respiratory models).
Symptoms within 30 days of study enrollment associated with dispersant exposure (GuLF STUDY, 2011–2013).
| Symptom | Exposed [ | Unexposed [ | aPR (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cough | 594 (27%) | 3,896 (15%) | 1.03 (0.96, 1.11) |
| Wheeze | 479 (22%) | 2,400 (9%) | 1.16 (1.06, 1.26) |
| Tightness in chest | 337 (16%) | 1,455 (6%) | 1.30 (1.16, 1.46) |
| Shortness of breath | 434 (20%) | 2,129 (8%) | 1.15 (1.06, 1.26) |
| Burning in nose, throat, lungs | 246 (11%) | 1,005 (4%) | 1.55 (1.34, 1.80) |
| Burning eyes | 363 (17%) | 1,699 (6%) | 1.44 (1.28, 1.61) |
| Itching eyes | 482 (22%) | 2,758 (11%) | 1.24 (1.12, 1.36) |
| Skin irritation | 207 (21%) | 8,891 (35%) | 0.84 (0.74, 0.95) |
Note: aPR, adjusted prevalence ratio; CI, confidence interval.
All models adjusted for gender, age, race, education, unemployment, disability, financial and perceived stress. Skin irritation models further adjusted for contact with oil/tar, contact with cleaning chemicals, and dispersant/oil interaction. Respiratory and eye irritation models at spill further adjusted for smoking, residential proximity to oil spill, level of oil exposure (total hydrocarbons, THC), use of decontamination chemicals, and preexisting lung disease (respiratory models).
(2,163 exposed, 26,020 unexposed).
(2,181 exposed, 26,182 unexposed).
(1,001 exposed, 25,248 unexposed).