Science Inventory

Environmental Persistent Organic Pesticides in Human Milk from Lactating North Carolina Women

Citation:

Hines, E. Environmental Persistent Organic Pesticides in Human Milk from Lactating North Carolina Women. Society of Toxicology, NA, Virtual, March 14 - 18, 2021.

Impact/Purpose:

The purpose of the US EPA MAMA Study was to evaluate environmental chemicals in human milk as a pilot study for the National Children's study. This presentation speaks to the environmental persistent organic pesticides that were measured in human milk and serum from 34 North Carolina women who donated samples two times during lactation.

Description:

Infants are exposed to environmental chemicals via many routes including ingestion of breast milk. Persistent organic pesticides are environmental chemicals that are found in measurable concentrations in human populations and biological media even though some of these chemicals have been phased out of use, production, or release to the environment. There are few studies quantifying human milk persistent organic pesticides especially in US populations and even fewer studies exist with repeated measures over time from the same individual. The US EPA Methods Advancement for Milk Analysis (MAMA) study developed and adapted methods to measure persistent organic pesticides and other environmental chemicals in milk and serum twice during lactation (at 2-7 weeks and 3-4 months postpartum) in 34 North Carolina women. Milk and serum were quantified for persistent organic pesticides (hexachlorobenzene (HCB), hexachlorocyclohexane (HCCH), oxychlordane, trans-nonachlor, DDE, DDT and Mirex). A majority of both the milk and serum pesticide samples contained pesticides at concentrations above limit of detection (LOD) , excluding serum HCCH. The majority of the chemicals did not show depuration (decreased amount of chemical between two points in lactation) in milk between visits; only HCB showed decreased concentrations in milk at the second clinic visit. Mean concentrations were highest for p,p’-DDE (163 ng/ml lipid in milk, 102 ng/ml lipid in serum) with Mirex having among the lowest concentrations (0.7 ng/ml lipid in milk, 0.9 ng/ml in serum). These data suggest that breast feeding North Carolina mothers are exposed to these environmental persistent organic pesticides and they can partition to breast milk. This abstract is the opinion of the authors and does not represent EPA or NIEHS policy.

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( PRESENTATION/ POSTER)
Product Published Date:03/17/2021
Record Last Revised:04/13/2021
OMB Category:Other
Record ID: 351380