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. 1993 Mar 17;85(6):474-8.
doi: 10.1093/jnci/85.6.474.

Relationship between environmental tobacco smoke exposure and carcinogen-hemoglobin adduct levels in nonsmokers

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Relationship between environmental tobacco smoke exposure and carcinogen-hemoglobin adduct levels in nonsmokers

S K Hammond et al. J Natl Cancer Inst. .

Abstract

Background: A potent bladder carcinogen for workers in the dye industry, 4-aminobiphenyl (4-ABP), is present in environmental tobacco smoke and has been shown to bond covalently with hemoglobin.

Purpose: The goal of this study was to examine the relationship between exposure to environmental tobacco smoke and levels of 4-ABP-hemoglobin adducts in nonsmoking pregnant women and to compare adduct levels in those women with levels in smoking pregnant women.

Methods: A questionnaire on smoking and exposure to environmental tobacco smoke was administered to 15 pregnant women who smoked cigarettes and 40 who did not smoke. Exposure was quantified for 1 week with a personal diary and by air sampling with a monitor worn by each woman. The monitor collected nicotine by passive diffusion to a filter treated with sodium bisulfate, and the deposit on the filter was analyzed by gas chromatography. Aliquots of maternal blood and cord blood collected during delivery were analyzed for 4-ABP-hemoglobin adducts by gas chromatography with negative ion chemical ionization mass spectrometry.

Results: The mean adduct level in smokers (184 pg of 4-ABP per gram of hemoglobin) was substantially higher than that in nonsmokers (22 pg/g). This difference was statistically significant. Among nonsmokers, the levels of 4-ABP adducts increased significantly with increasing environmental tobacco smoke level (P = .009). Those in the lowest exposure category (< 0.5 micrograms/m3 weekly average nicotine) had median 4-ABP-hemoglobin adduct levels of 15 pg of 4-ABP per gram of hemoglobin, while those in the highest exposure category (> or = 2.0 micrograms/m3) had median levels of 26 pg/g. Nonsmokers in this study had a median adduct level of 20 pg/g, and smokers had a median level of 143 pg/g.

Conclusions: 4-ABP-hemoglobin adduct levels in nonsmokers were 14% of the levels in smokers, which is consistent with findings of 20% in two other studies. Nonsmokers may receive a nontrivial dose of carcinogens from environmental tobacco smoke proportional to their exposure to environmental tobacco smoke.

Implication: The relationship between environmental tobacco smoke exposure and 4-ABP-hemoglobin adduct levels supports epidemiologic evidence that environmental tobacco smoke is carcinogenic to passive smokers.

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