Abstract

Hexavalent chromium (Cr(VI)) is toxic, carcinogenic, and mutagenic substances. Oral exposure to Cr(VI) is thought to be primarily from drinking water. However, under the certain reporting limit (~0.1 µg/L), percentage of Cr(VI) concentration in mineral water products under the reporting limit were estimated higher than 50%. Data whose values are below certain limits and thus cannot be accurately determined are known as left-censored. The high censored percentage leads to estimation of Cr(VI) exposure uncertain. It is well known that conventional substitution method often used in food analytical science cause severe bias. To estimate appropriate summary statistics on Cr(VI) concentration in mineral water products, parameter estimation using the Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) method under assumption of a lognormal distribution was performed. Stan, a probabilistic programming language, was used for MCMC. We evaluated the accuracy, coverage probability, and reliability of estimates with MCMC by comparison with other estimation methods (discard nondetects, substituting half of reporting limit, Kaplan-Meier, regression on order statistics, and maximum likelihood estimation) using 1000 randomly generated data subsets (n = 150) with the obtained parameters. The evaluation shows that MCMC is the best estimation method in this context with greater accuracy, coverage probability, and reliability over a censored percentage of 10-90%. The mean concentration, which was estimated with MCMC, was 0.289×10−3 mg/L and this value was sufficiently lower than the regulated value of 0.05 mg/L stipulated by the Food Sanitation Act.

Highlights

  • Chromium (Cr) is a metal widely distributed in the environment

  • Since the data used have more than 50% nondetects, KM estimates may be less relevant

  • We demonstrate that parameter estimation from leftcensored data with MCMC show better performance on accuracy, coverage probability, and reliability compared to other methods (DN, RL/2, KM, MLE, and ROS) for Cr(VI) concentration in MW products

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Summary

Introduction

Chromium (Cr) is a metal widely distributed in the environment. Trivalent Cr (Cr(III)) is an essential nutrient for cholesterol, fat and glucose metabolism in human bodies, while hexavalent Cr (Cr(VI)) is toxic, carcinogenic, mutagenic, and mobile in nature[2]). Once Cr(VI) enters inside the cell, it undergoes a rapid metabolic reduction and is converted to Cr(III)[4]). When nondetects are present in data, they lead to difficulties in computing statistical metrics. Estimates from the data with nondetects could vary widely depends upon the censored proportion due to the properties of the measured substance and the performance of the analytical instrument, and the performance and the assumption of the statistical analysis methods. Estimation of Cr(VI) exposure via MW products becomes uncertain

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