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Non-smoking coke oven workers show an occupational PAH exposure-related increase in urinary mutagens
Authors:Simioli P  Lupi S  Gregorio P  Siwinska E  Mielzynska D  Clonfero E  Pavanello S
Affiliation:Section of Hygiene and Occupational Medicine, Department of Clinical and Experimental Medicine, University of Ferrara, Italy.
Abstract:We examined the urinary mutagenicity in the YG1024 Salmonella typhimurium strain in the presence of S9 mix, of 31 male non-smoking coke oven workers and an equal number of controls matched for gender and dietary habits. Occupational PAH exposure to the workers was assessed by means of the individual urinary post-shift excretion of 1-pyrenol (mean +/- S.D.: 5.41 +/- 6.06 micromole/mol creatinine). Eleven urinary extracts of workers (35.5%) were clearly mutagenic (with at least a doubling of the number of spontaneous revertants), against only two samples in the control group (6.5%) (chi2-test; chi2 = 7.883; P < 0.01). Moreover, the mean mutagenic activity level corrected for dilution/concentration of the urine was about three times higher in coke oven workers than in matched controls (mean +/- S.D. (range) 495 +/- 407 (89.7-1603) versus 186 +/- 113 (14.2-524) net revertants/mmol creatinine; Mann-Whitney U-test, z = 3.86, P < 0.001). Simple linear regression analysis showed that the coke workers' urinary mutagenic activity is associated with the PAH occupation-related urinary excretion of 1-pyrenol (r = 0.41, P = 0.0215). This study definitely demonstrates an occupation-related exposure of coke oven workers' bladder epithelium to mutagenic PAH metabolites. This factor, mainly in the case of high exposure studied here, may account for a higher bladder cancer risk in coke oven workers.
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