Abstract
The objectives of this study were to evaluate the value of urinary hexafluoroisopropanol (HFIP) and fluoride (F-) measurement for the biological monitoring of operating room personnel exposed to sevoflurane. Fifty members of operating room staffs from eight different hospitals took part in the study. To assess external exposure to sevoflurane, air samples were collected during the whole anaesthesia period by a passive sampling device (3M 3500 organic vapour monitor) attached close to the breathing zone of each subject. Urine was collected before (BA) and at the end of anaesthesia (EA) for the determination of HFIP, fluoride and creatinine. Average airborne concentration of sevoflurane was 19.0 ppm (range: ND-139.9 ppm) with a mean duration of anaesthesia of 221 min (range: 60-435 min). There was a better correlation between external and internal exposure as estimated by EA urinary HFIP (r = 0.78; p <0.0001) compared with EA urinary F- (r = 0.41; p = 0.0031). Furthermore determination of urinary HFIP seemed more suited than that of F- for the assessment of sevoflurane exposure because of lower background in BA samples (86 % of BA HFIP values were under the limit of detection). Based on these results, values of 9.6 and 4.3 mg HFIP g-1 creatinine correspond to airborne concentrations of 50 and 20 ppm of sevoflurane, respectively. Among the confounding parameters investigated (body mass index (BMI), sex, cytochrome P450 polymorphism) only BMI showed statistically significant influence on sevoflurane metabolism at these low levels of exposure. The measurement of HFIP in urine at the end of the surgical procedure constitutes a good index to assess occupational exposure to sevoflurane. Further studies will be necessary to propose an health-based limit value which remains to be determined from the relationship between effects and internal dose as can be assessed by HFIP measurement in urine.
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