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

Q. Lan, L. Zhang, X. Tang, M. Shen, M.T. Smith, C. Qiu, Y. Ge, Z. Ji, J. Xiong, J. He, B. Reiss, Z. Hao, S. Liu, Y. Xie, W. Guo, M.P. Purdue, N. Galvan, K.X. Xin, W. Hu, L.E. Beane FreemanA. Blair, L. Li, N. Rothman, R. Vermeulen, H. Huang

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

    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.
    Original languageUndefined/Unknown
    Pages (from-to)1592-1596
    Number of pages5
    JournalCarcinogenesis
    Volume31
    Issue number9
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2010

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