1. Non-parametric estimation of low-concentration benzene metabolism
- Author
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Peter J. Boogaard, A. Robert Schnatter, Louis Anthony Cox, Marcy I. Banton, and Hans B. Ketelslegers
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Muconic acid ,Metabolite ,Catechols ,Toxicology ,Statistics, Nonparametric ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Occupational Exposure ,Humans ,Organic chemistry ,Phenol ,Benzene ,Volume concentration ,Hydroquinone ,Bayes Theorem ,General Medicine ,Metabolism ,Middle Aged ,Toluene ,Acetylcysteine ,Hydroquinones ,030104 developmental biology ,chemistry ,Air Pollution, Indoor ,Creatinine ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Environmental chemistry ,Linear Models ,Female ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
Two apparently contradictory findings in the literature on low-dose human metabolism of benzene are as follows. First, metabolism is approximately linear at low concentrations, e.g., below 10 ppm. This is consistent with decades of quantitative modeling of benzene pharmacokinetics and dose-dependent metabolism. Second, measured benzene exposure and metabolite concentrations for occupationally exposed benzene workers in Tianjin, China show that dose-specific metabolism (DSM) ratios of metabolite concentrations per ppm of benzene in air decrease steadily with benzene concentration, with the steepest decreases below 3 ppm. This has been interpreted as indicating that metabolism at low concentrations of benzene is highly nonlinear. We reexamine the data using non-parametric methods. Our main conclusion is that both findings are correct; they are not contradictory. Low-concentration metabolism can be linear, with metabolite concentrations proportional to benzene concentrations in air, and yet DSM ratios can still decrease with benzene concentrations. This is because a ratio of random variables can be negatively correlated with its own denominator even if the mean of the numerator is proportional to the denominator. Interpreting DSM ratios that decrease with air benzene concentrations as evidence of nonlinear metabolism is therefore unwarranted when plots of metabolite concentrations against benzene ppm in air show approximately straight-line relationships between them, as in the Tianjin data. Thus, an apparent contradiction that has fueled heated discussions in the recent literature can be resolved by recognizing that highly nonlinear, decreasing DSM ratios are consistent with linear metabolism.
- Published
- 2017