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The potential of exposure biomarkers in epidemiologic studies of reproductive health.

To further the development and application of exposure markers in field investigations in reproductive epidemiology, we have synthesized recent examinations of the issues surrounding exposure measurements in reproductive epidemiology. The specific goals of this paper are to define exposure biomarker...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Hogue, C J, Brewster, M A
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 1991
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1519493/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/2050070
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author Hogue, C J
Brewster, M A
author_facet Hogue, C J
Brewster, M A
author_sort Hogue, C J
collection PubMed
description To further the development and application of exposure markers in field investigations in reproductive epidemiology, we have synthesized recent examinations of the issues surrounding exposure measurements in reproductive epidemiology. The specific goals of this paper are to define exposure biomarkers and explore their potential uses, particularly as screening tools. The tests for glucaric acid, thioethers, mutagenicity, and porphyrin patterns meet the general criteria for useful exposure screens. For certain xenobiotic agents, these tests accurately differentiate exposure levels, as demonstrated in occupational and environmental epidemiologic studies. As urinary screens, they are noninvasive and applicable on a large scale with current laboratory techniques. For short-term exposure, glucaric acid, thioethers, and mutagenicity tests are useful. Porphyrin patterns may measure cumulative effects as well as current exposure levels. The usefulness of these tests in epidemiologic studies of environmental effects on reproductive health has yet to be studied. To do so, the battery must be standardized for pregnant women, and test results must be correlated with measured adverse reproductive outcomes, such as gestational length and birthweight. This correlation is particularly important because maternal exposure rather than fetal exposure is being measured. The extent to which xenobiotic chemicals cross the placental barrier may vary greatly depending on the type of exposures, timing in pregnancy, and maternal detoxification capability. Without better exposure measures, epidemiologic studies of reproductive health probably will not successfully identify xenobiotic fetotoxic agents in the environment. However, with an adequate battery of nonspecific exposure biomarkers, prospective studies of environmental effects on pregnancy outcomes might be possible.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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spelling pubmed-15194932006-07-26 The potential of exposure biomarkers in epidemiologic studies of reproductive health. Hogue, C J Brewster, M A Environ Health Perspect Research Article To further the development and application of exposure markers in field investigations in reproductive epidemiology, we have synthesized recent examinations of the issues surrounding exposure measurements in reproductive epidemiology. The specific goals of this paper are to define exposure biomarkers and explore their potential uses, particularly as screening tools. The tests for glucaric acid, thioethers, mutagenicity, and porphyrin patterns meet the general criteria for useful exposure screens. For certain xenobiotic agents, these tests accurately differentiate exposure levels, as demonstrated in occupational and environmental epidemiologic studies. As urinary screens, they are noninvasive and applicable on a large scale with current laboratory techniques. For short-term exposure, glucaric acid, thioethers, and mutagenicity tests are useful. Porphyrin patterns may measure cumulative effects as well as current exposure levels. The usefulness of these tests in epidemiologic studies of environmental effects on reproductive health has yet to be studied. To do so, the battery must be standardized for pregnant women, and test results must be correlated with measured adverse reproductive outcomes, such as gestational length and birthweight. This correlation is particularly important because maternal exposure rather than fetal exposure is being measured. The extent to which xenobiotic chemicals cross the placental barrier may vary greatly depending on the type of exposures, timing in pregnancy, and maternal detoxification capability. Without better exposure measures, epidemiologic studies of reproductive health probably will not successfully identify xenobiotic fetotoxic agents in the environment. However, with an adequate battery of nonspecific exposure biomarkers, prospective studies of environmental effects on pregnancy outcomes might be possible.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) 1991-01 /pmc/articles/PMC1519493/ /pubmed/2050070 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Hogue, C J
Brewster, M A
The potential of exposure biomarkers in epidemiologic studies of reproductive health.
title The potential of exposure biomarkers in epidemiologic studies of reproductive health.
title_full The potential of exposure biomarkers in epidemiologic studies of reproductive health.
title_fullStr The potential of exposure biomarkers in epidemiologic studies of reproductive health.
title_full_unstemmed The potential of exposure biomarkers in epidemiologic studies of reproductive health.
title_short The potential of exposure biomarkers in epidemiologic studies of reproductive health.
title_sort potential of exposure biomarkers in epidemiologic studies of reproductive health.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1519493/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/2050070
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