Abstract

BackgroundBenzene, an important component of organic solvents, is commonly used in industry. Meanwhile, benzene is a human carcinogen leading to leukemia. Although the links between benzene and various types of genetic damage indicators have been evaluated in several studies, but their results remain inconsistent. So we conducted a meta-analysis, and to explore the influence of low concentration benzene exposure on workers’ genetic damage indicators using 3.25 mg/m3 as the boundary value, in order to provide a basis for improved prevention and control of the harm from benzene exposure to the occupational population.MethodsWe conducted a search of five databases, including Pub Med, Web of Science, China National Knowledge Infrastructure (CNKI), Wan Fang Data and Chongqing VIP, to identify relevant articles up to December 25, 2018. Two researchers independently extracted and evaluated the data according to the inclusion and exclusion criteria of the literature. The imported articles were managed by Endnote X7, and the data were extracted and sorted by Excel 2013. We utilized Stata 12.0 software to perform the meta-analysis in the present study.ResultsA total of 68 eligible articles were finally included for the synthetic analyses. The meta-analysis results showed that occupational benzene exposure led to significantly increased Micronucleus (MN) frequency, Sister chromatid exchange (SCE) frequency, Chromosome aberration (CA) frequency, Olive Tail moment (OTM), Tail moment (TM), Tail length (TL), and Tail DNA% (T DNA%) compared to the control group (P < 0.05), and the pooled effect value estimates were 1.36, 0.98, 0.76, 1.06, 0.96, 1.78, and 1.42, respectively. Subsequent analysis of the effect of low concentration benzene exposure on genetic damage found significantly increased MN frequency increased compared with the control group (P < 0.05).ConclusionsOccupational benzene exposure can affect multiple genetic damage indicators. Even at an exposure concentration lower than 3.25 mg/m3, benzene exposure has genotoxicity. These data provide an important scientific basis for the further revision of occupational disease prevention strategies. At the same time, increased attention should be focused on the health monitoring of the occupational population exposed to benzene, and health management should be strengthened to improve the health of the occupational population.

Highlights

  • Benzene, an important component of organic solvents, is commonly used in industry

  • Epidemiological studies have shown that benzene exposure is associated with genetic damage, and some studies have shown elevated the frequency of Sister chromatid exchange (SCE), Micronucleus (MN), and Chromosome aberrations (CA) in benzene-exposed workers [4, 5]

  • Characteristics of the studies According to the search strategy, we found a total of 3714 articles (1056 from PubMed, 823 from Web of Science, 463 from China National Knowledge Infrastructure (CNKI), 1150 from Wan Fang Data and 222 from Chongqing VIP)

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Summary

Introduction

An important component of organic solvents, is commonly used in industry. Benzene is a human carcinogen leading to leukemia. The links between benzene and various types of genetic damage indicators have been evaluated in several studies, but their results remain inconsistent. Benzene (C6H6) is the simplest aromatic hydrocarbon and organic solvent. It is an important chemical compound used in the manufacturing of polymers, plastics, rubber, dyes, detergents. Benzene can affect human health and cause many health problems, such as decreased white blood cell and platelet counts in peripheral blood, aplastic anemia, myelodysplastic syndromes, and leukemia [1, 2]. The links between benzene and various types of genetic damage have been evaluated in several studies [6–8], the evidence from these independent studies was found to be insufficient to support such associations

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