Compartir
Título
Assessing population exposure to phthalate plasticizers in thirteen Spanish cities through the analysis of wastewater
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Phthalic acid esters
Wastewater-based epidemiology
Environmental human exposure
Risk assessment
Spain
Clasificación UNESCO
2301.03 Análisis Cromatográfico
3308.10 Tecnología de Aguas Residuales
Fecha de publicación
2021-01
Editor
Elsevier
Citación
González-Mariño, I., Ares, L., Montes, R., Rodil, R., Cela, R., López-García, E., Postigo, C., López de Alda, M., Pocurull, E., Marcé, R. M., Bijlsma, L., Hernández, F., Picó, Y., Andreu, V., Rico, A., Valcárcel, Y., Miró, M., Etxebarria, N., & Quintana, J. B. (2021). Assessing population exposure to phthalate plasticizers in thirteen Spanish cities through the analysis of wastewater. Journal of Hazardous Materials, 401, 123272. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhazmat.2020.123272
Resumen
[EN]Phthalates are widely used plasticizers that produce endocrine-disrupting disorders. Quantifying exposure is crucial to perform risk assessments and to develop proper health measures. Herein, a wastewater-based epidemiology approach has been applied to estimate human exposure to six of the mostly used phthalates within the Spanish population. Wastewater samples were collected over four weekdays from seventeen wastewater treatment plants serving thirteen cities and ca. 6 million people (12.8 % of the Spanish population). Phthalate metabolite loads in wastewater were transformed into metabolite concentrations in urine and into daily exposure levels to the parent phthalates. Considering all the sampled sites, population-weighted overall means of the estimated concentrations in urine varied between 0.7 ng/mL and 520 ng/mL. Very high levels, compared to human biomonitoring data, were estimated for monomethyl phthalate, metabolite of dimethyl phthalate. This, together with literature data pointing to other sources of this metabolite in sewage led to its exclusion for exposure assessments. For the remaining metabolites, estimated concentrations were closer to those found in urine. Their 4-days average exposure levels ranged from 2 to 1347 μg/(day∙inh), exceeding in some sites the daily exposure thresholds set for di-i-butyl phthalate and di-n-buthyl phthalate by the European Food Safety Authority.
URI
ISSN
0304-3894
DOI
10.1016/j.jhazmat.2020.123272
Versión del editor
Aparece en las colecciones
- DQANB. Artículos [108]













