Abstract

The aims of the present study were to clarify the work environment contamination by antineoplastic drugs in a hospital ward and to assess the genotoxic risks to nurses who routinely handle antineoplastic drugs in Japan. The exposed group consisted of 19 female nurses who routinely handled antineoplastic drugs. The control group consisted of 18 female nurses who did not handle antineoplastic drugs in the same hospital as the exposed group. The genotoxicity of the 19 antineoplastic drugs used in the hospital ward and 8 wipe samples of the workbench after handling of antineoplastic drugs were measured using the umu assay. Lymphocyte DNA damage (tail length) was measured with alkaline methods of the single cell gel electrophoresis assay (comet assay). Of the 19 antineoplastic drugs, dacarbazine, bleomycin, daunorubicin, doxorubicin, pirarubicin, carboplatin, cisplatin and etoposide induced genotoxicity. Of the 8 sampling d, the umu activity of the wipe sample was positive on 3 d. Contamination of the workbench was found when the nurses handled more drugs than on other days. The medians of the tail length in the comet assay were 8.5 and 5.1 microm, respectively, for the exposed and control groups, with a significant difference (p=0.004 by Mann-Whitney's U-test). In the present study, the nurses of the exposed group were considered to have been exposed to antineoplastic drugs and lymphocyte DNA damage of the exposed group was suggested to be induced by antineoplastic drugs.

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