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Title: Occupational exposure to trichloroethylene is associated with a decline in lymphocyte subsets and soluble CD27 and CD30 markers.

Authors: Lan, Qing; Zhang, Luoping; Tang, Xiaojiang; Shen, Min; Smith, Martyn T; Qiu, Chuangyi; Ge, Yichen; Ji, Zhiying; Xiong, Jun; He, Jian; Reiss, Boris; Hao, Zhenyue; Liu, Songwang; Xie, Yuxuan; Guo, Weihong; Purdue, Mark P; Galvan, Noe; Xin, Kerry X; Hu, Wei; Beane Freeman, Laura E; Blair, Aaron E; Li, Laiyu; Rothman, Nathaniel; Vermeulen, Roel; Huang, Hanlin

Published In Carcinogenesis, (2010 Sep)

Abstract: Occupational cohort and case-control studies suggest that trichloroethylene (TCE) exposure may be associated with non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) but findings are not consistent. There is a need for mechanistic studies to evaluate the biologic plausibility of this association. We carried out a cross-sectional molecular epidemiology study of 80 healthy workers that used TCE and 96 comparable unexposed controls in Guangdong, China. Personal exposure measurements were taken over a three-week period before blood collection. Ninety-six percent of workers were exposed to TCE below the current US Occupational Safety and Health Administration Permissible Exposure Limit (100 p.p.m. 8 h time-weighted average), with a mean (SD) of 22.2 (36.0) p.p.m. The total lymphocyte count and each of the major lymphocyte subsets including CD4+ T cells, CD8+ T cells, natural killer (NK) cells and B cells were significantly decreased among the TCE-exposed workers compared with controls (P < 0.05), with evidence of a dose-dependent decline. Further, there was a striking 61% decline in sCD27 plasma level and a 34% decline in sCD30 plasma level among TCE-exposed workers compared with controls. This is the first report that TCE exposure under the current Occupational Safety and Health Administration workplace standard is associated with a decline in all major lymphocyte subsets and sCD27 and sCD30, which play an important role in regulating cellular activity in subsets of T, B and NK cells and are associated with lymphocyte activation. Given that altered immunity is an established risk factor for NHL, these results add to the biologic plausibility that TCE is a possible lymphomagen.

PubMed ID: 20530238 Exiting the NIEHS site

MeSH Terms: No MeSH terms associated with this publication

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