Publication

Characterising glyphosate exposures among amenity horticulturists using multiple spot urine samples

Connolly, Alison
Basinas, Ioannis
Jones, Kate
Galea, Karen S.
Kenny, Laura
McGowan, Padraic
Coggins, Marie A.
Citation
Connolly, Alison, Basinas, Ioannis, Jones, Kate, Galea, Karen S., Kenny, Laura, McGowan, Padraic, & Coggins, Marie A. (2018). Characterising glyphosate exposures among amenity horticulturists using multiple spot urine samples. International Journal of Hygiene and Environmental Health, 221(7), 1012-1022. doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijheh.2018.06.007
Abstract
Background Glyphosate has recently received much public attention following its Group 2A probably carcinogenic to humans classification from the International Agency for Research on Cancer. Despite the widespread use of glyphosate, there is limited data on potential exposures during common occupational uses. Objective The study aimed to characterise occupational exposures to glyphosate among amenity horticulturists through the collection and analysis of urine samples following pesticide application. The impact of work practices on personal exposure, as well as suitability of collecting multiple spot urine samples as a sampling strategy for the assessment of occupational exposure for glyphosate were also examined. Methods A minimum of three spot urine samples were collected per work task; before the work task began, after the work task completion and the following first morning void. All samples were analysed separately for glyphosate using liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry and for creatinine. Differences in urinary glyphosate concentrations between the pre-task samples versus the post-task and the peak urinary samples were both analysed using paired Student t-tests. Determinants of exposure on glyphosate urine concentrations were evaluated using Pearson's correlation coefficients and linear regression. A multivariate mixed effect model were elaborated to compare the glyphosate concentrations between post-task and following first morning void samples. In these models, worker identity was entered as a random effect to account for the presence of correlations between repeated measurements from the same individuals. Results Peak urine glyphosate concentrations measured for work tasks were 2.5, 1.9, 1.9 and 7.4 μg L−1 (arithmetic mean, geometric mean, median and maximum value, respectively). Concentrations were highest in samples taken up to 3 h after completing the work task. Regression analysis showed that workers who sprayed the day before the sampling task had higher glyphosate concentrations in pre-task samples than those who did not spray the day before (p 
Publisher
Elsevier
Publisher DOI
10.1016/j.ijheh.2018.06.007
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Ireland