Abstract

Hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyl transferase ( hprt) mutation frequency (M f) was studied in workers at a polybutadiene rubber production facility in Yanshan, China. Exposed workers included for study were active either as process analysts, who sampled butadiene production process lines and analyzed product by gas chromatography, or as process operators, who did routine process control, minor maintenance and, as needed, major repair operations. For process analysts at the polymer and dimethyl formamide (DMF) facilities, the median air levels of BD were 1.0 and 3.5 ppm, respectively. Among process operators, air levels of 1.1 ppm were found during routine activities, while the median air level during pump repair and related operations was 45 ppm (6-h time-weighted average). Overall, M f was similar in unexposed (mean M f = 20.2 × 10 −6) and butadiene-exposed (mean M f = 21.6 × 10 −6) workers ( P = 0.68). M f decreased with cloning efficiency, increased with age, and was moderately greater in women than in men. After adjustment by multiple regression analysis for mean age, sex, and cloning efficiency, the adjusted mean M f ( X adj) was 13.6 × 10 −6 in unexposed and 18.0 × 10 −6 in butadiene-exposed. This 32% difference was, however, not statistically significant ( P = 0.13). Butadiene exposure was associated with a modest, if any, increase in hprt M f in this population of Chinese workers.

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