Abstract

Triphenyl phosphate (TPP or TPhP) is commonly used as an additive plasticizer or organophosphate flame retardant (OPFR) in consumer products including nail polish. We evaluated exposure to TPhP from 12 nail salon technicians working at four nail salons located in California over a period of two work days. Bulk samples of 15 nail polishes and other nail products were collected. Study participants also provided two personal air samples, two hand wipe samples (pre- and post-shift on day two), and two urine samples (pre-shift day one and post-shift day two). The geometric mean (GM) of TPhP air sampling concentrations was 7.39ng/m3. Post-shift TPhP hand wipe concentrations (GM 1.35 μg/sample) were significantly higher (p=0.024) than pre-shift hand wipe concentrations (GM 0.29 μg/sample). Diphenyl phosphate (DPP or DPhP), a urinary metabolite of TPhP used in this study as a biomarker of exposure, was detected in all post-shift urine samples and 75% of urine pre-shift samples. DPhP post-shift concentrations (GM 1.35μg/g creatinine) were significantly higher than pre-shift concentrations (GM 0.84μg/g creatinine; p=0.012). In addition, DPhP post-shift concentrations were correlated with TPhP post-shift hand wipe concentrations, suggesting dermal contact may be a relevant exposure pathway for nail salon workers.

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