| Literature DB >> 31881883 |
Sylvie Remy1,2,3, Ramona Hambach4, Marc Van Sprundel5, Caroline Teughels6, Tim S Nawrot7,8, Jurgen Buekers9, Christa Cornelis9, Liesbeth Bruckers10, Greet Schoeters9,11,12.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Recent lead (Pb) exposure reduction strategies enabled to lower children's blood lead levels (B-Pb) worldwide. This study reports the estimated intelligence gain and social cost savings attributable to recent exposure reduction based on reported B-Pb levels observed in adolescents sampled within the framework of the Flemish Environment and Health Studies (FLEHS, Belgium), i.e. in 2003-2004 (FLEHSI), in 2008-2009 (FLEHSII), and in 2013-2014 (FLEHSIII).Entities:
Keywords: Chemical exposure prevention; HBM; Human biomonitoring; Intelligence and economic gain; Lead exposure
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31881883 PMCID: PMC6935110 DOI: 10.1186/s12940-019-0548-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health ISSN: 1476-069X Impact factor: 5.984
Fig. 1Dose response function: Inverse relationship between IQ and blood lead levels (B-Pb) for B-Pb between 20 μg/L and 300 μg/L. The red line represents the linear-log dose response relationship as estimated based on pooled international data by Lanphear et al. (2005) [7]. The blue line represents the linear-interval dose response relationship as suggested by Gould et al. (2009) [22] which assumes uniform decreases between 20 and 100 μg/L, between 100 and 200 μg/L and above 200 μg/L. The dotted lines represent the 95% confidence limits for both dose response relationships
Fig. 2Blood lead levels in the Flemish Environment and Health Studies: Probability density function of blood lead levels (B-Pb) in adolescents sampled during the Flemish Environment and Health Studies (FLEHS). The shaded area demonstrates the percentage of the population with B-Pb above 20 μg/L (vertical dotted line) which is annotated by the arrows
Estimated IQ and economic loss attributable to blood lead levels above 20 μg/L: Estimates per 100,000 individuals in FLEHSI, FLEHSII, and FLEHSIII as assessed by the linear-log and the linear-interval dose response relationship
| Dose Response Relationship | Study – Sampling period | Proportion population | Average IQ-loss per individual (points) with B-Pb ≥ 20 μg/L | IQ-loss per 100,000 individuals (points) attributable to B-Pb | Cost per 100,000 individuals attributable to B-Pb |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Linear-log | FLEHSI 2003–2004 | 56.62 | 1.67 (95% CI:1.03–2.3) | 94,280 (95% CI: 58,427-130,138) | 1835 (95% CI: 1137-2533) |
FLEHSII 2008–2009 | 22.79 | 0.66 (95% CI:0.41–0.91) | 14,993 (95% CI: 9289-20,695) | 292 (95% CI: 181–403) | |
FLEHSIII 2013–2014 | 2.50 | 0.39 (95% CI:0.24–0.54) | 976 (95% CI: 604–1347) | 19 (95% CI: 12–26) | |
| Sensitivity analysis: Linear-interval | FLEHSI 2003–2004 | 56.62 | 1.14 (95% CI:0.71–1.57) | 64,421 (95% CI: 39,923-88,913) | 1254 (95% CI: 777–1731) |
FLEHSII 2008–2009 | 22.79 | 0.33 (95% CI:0.2–0.46) | 7539 (95% CI: 4672–10,404) | 147 (95% CI: 91–203) | |
FLEHSIII 2013–2014 | 2.50 | 0.18 (95% CI:0.11–0.25) | 451 (95% CI: 279–622) | 9 (95% CI: 5–12) |
Abbreviations: B-Pb Blood lead level, CI Confidence Interval
aTaking into account the fraction of the population having B-Pb ≥ 20 μg Pb/L
bBased on lifetime value of 1 IQ point, i.e. € 19,464 (euro 2018)
Estimated IQ and economic cost over a 15-year period in Flanders, Belgium: Comparison of IQ decrement and economic costs attributable to blood lead levels above 20 μg/L within the Flemish population of 15 year-olds between 2000 and 2014, and from 2015 to 2029
| Dose response relationship | Time span | Number of 15 year-olds in study period | Proportion population B-Pb > = 20 μg/L (%) | Number of 15 year-olds with B-Pb > = 20 μg/L | Average IQ-loss (points) per individual with B-Pb > = 20 μg/L | IQ-loss (points) attributable to B-Pb > = 20 μg/La | Cost attributable to B-Pb > = 20 μg/L (milj. EUR)a,d |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Linear-log | FLEHSI (2000–2004) | 340,355 | 56.62 | 192,717 | 1.67 (95% CI:1.03–2.3) | 320,888 (95%CI: 198,859-442,931) | 6246 (95%CI: 3873-8621) |
| FLEHSII (2005–2009) | 364,704 | 22.79 | 83,129 | 0.66 (95% CI:0.41–0.91) | 54,680 (95%CI: 33,878-75,475) | 1064 (95%CI: 659–1469) | |
| FLEHSIII (2010–2014) | 347,761 | 2.50 | 8689 | 0.39 (95% CI:0.24–0.54) | 3394 (95%CI: 2102-4684) | 66 (95%CI: 41–91) | |
| 2.50 | 26305b | 0.39 (95% CI:0.24–0.54) | |||||
| Sensitivity analysis: Linear-interval | FLEHSI (2000–2004) | 340,355 | 56.62 | 192,717 | 1.14 (95% CI:0.71–1.57) | 219,260 (95%CI: 135,881-302,619) | 4268 (95%CI: 2645-5890) |
| FLEHSII (2005–2009) | 364,704 | 22.79 | 83,129 | 0.33 (95% CI:0.2–0.46) | 27,495 (95%CI: 17,041-37,944) | 535 (95%CI: 332–739) | |
| FLEHSIII (2010–2014) | 347,761 | 2.50 | 8689 | 0.18 (95% CI:0.11–0.25) | 1569 (95%CI: 972–2164) | 31 (95%CI: 19–42) | |
| 2.50 | 26,305b | 0.18 (95% CI:0.11–0.25) |
Abbreviations: B-Pb Blood lead level, CI Confidence Interval
aTaking into account the fraction of the population having B-Pb ≥ 20 μg Pb/L
bestimated based on percentage of adolescents exceeding 20 μg Pb/L in FLEHSIII (2.50%) and total number of 15 year-olds in the period 2000–2014 (1052820): 2.5% × 1,052,820 = 26,305
cset equal to values FLEHSIII
dBased on lifetime value of 1 IQ point, i.e. € 19,464 (euro 2018)