Abstract
Climate change has contributed to increased frequency and intensity of wildfire. Studying its acute effects is limited due to unpredictable nature of wildfire occurrence, which necessitates readily deployable techniques to collect biospecimens. To identify biomarkers of wildfire's acute effects, we conducted this exploratory study in eight healthy campers (four men and four women) who self-collected nasal fluid, urine, saliva, and skin wipes at different time points before, during, and after 4-hour exposure to wood smoke in a camping event. Concentrations of black carbon in the air and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in participants' silicone wristbands were significantly elevated during the exposure session. Among 30 arachidonic acid metabolites measured, lipoxygenase metabolites were more abundant in nasal fluid and saliva, whereas cyclooxygenase and non-enzymatic metabolites were more abundant in urine. We observed drastic increases, at 8 hours following the exposure, in urinary levels of PGE2 (398%) and 15-keto-PGF2α (191%) (FDR<10%), with greater increases in men (FDR < 0.01%) than in women. No significant changes were observed for other metabolites in urine or the other biospecimens. Our results suggest urinary PGE2 and 15-keto-PGF2α as promising biomarkers reflecting pathophysiologic (likely sex-dependent) changes induced by short-term exposure to wildfire.
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