Title of article :
The impact of water consumption, point-of-use filtration and
exposure categorization on exposure misclassification of
ingested drinking water contaminants
Author/Authors :
J. Michael Wright، نويسنده , , *، نويسنده , , Patricia A. Murphy، نويسنده , , Mark J. Nieuwenhuijsen، نويسنده , , David A. Savitz، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
هفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Abstract :
The use of population-level indices to estimate individual exposures is an important limitation of previous epidemiologic
studies of disinfection by-products (DBPs). We examined exposure misclassification resulting from the use of system average
DBP concentrations to estimate individual-level exposures. Data were simulated (n =1000 iterations) for 100 subjects across 10
water systems based on the following assumptions: DBP concentrations ranged from 0–99 Ag/L with limited intra-system
variability; water intake ranged from 0.5–2.5 L/day; 20% of subjects used bottled water exclusively; 20% of subjects used
filtered tap water exclusively; DBP concentrations were reduced by 50% or 90% following filtration. DBP exposure percentiles
were used to classify subjects into different exposure levels (e.g., low, intermediate, high and very high) for four classification
approaches. Compared to estimates of DBP ingestion that considered daily consumption, source type (i.e., unfiltered tap,
filtered tap, and bottled water), and filter efficiency (with 90% DBP removal), 48–62% of subjects were misclassified across one
category based on system average concentrations. Average misclassification across at least two exposure categories (e.g., from
high to low) ranged from 4–14%. The median classification strategy resulted in the least misclassification, and volume of water
intake was the most influential modifier of ingestion exposures. These data illustrate the importance of individual water use
information in minimizing exposure misclassification in epidemiologic studies of drinking water contaminants.
Keywords :
Disinfection by-products , Water consumption , trihalomethanes , Exposure misclassification , water intake , haloacetic acids
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment