Abstract

The main objective of the present research is to evaluate the exposure to pesticides in children (n = 568) from the Valencian Region (Spain). Six non-specific and 20 specific metabolites of organophosphate pesticides (OPs), herbicides (Herb), and pyrethroids (Pyr) were analyzed in urine samples. The biomarkers with the highest detection frequencies (>70%) were diethyl phosphate, p-nitrophenol, 3-phenoxybenzoic acid, and 3,5,6-trichloro-2-pyridinol, whose geometric mean concentrations (ng·ml-n1) were 1.53, 1.03, 1.51 and 1.19, respectively. Robust regression models showed that the province of residence and the recent consumption of vegetables, legumes and cereals were some of the most important predictors of pesticide exposure. Pesticide risk assessment is estimated using two different strategies: one based on the pesticides' mode of action (MoA); and the other based on cumulative assessment groups (CAGs), proposed by EFSA. The estimated daily intakes (EDIs) ranged from 0.08 (chlorpyrifos) to 1.62 μg·kg bw-1 (λ-cyhalothrin). The MoA approach resulted in hazard quotients ranging from 0.01 (chlorpyrifos) to 0.65 (λ-cyhalothrin), and a hazard index for OPs lower than 1. Similarly, the risk assessment based on CAGs led to total margins of exposure (MOETs) far from 100. In conclusion, both risk assessment strategies does not reveal any evidence of a potential health risk due to pesticide exposure in Spanish children.

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