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Comparative analysis of the concentrations of serum cotinine and hydroxycotinine for US children, adolescents, and adults: impact of exposure to environmental tobacco smoke at home and other indoor environments.

Ram Baboo Jain
Published in: Environmental science and pollution research international (2021)
This study was carried out to investigate how serum cotinine and hydroxycotinine concentrations compare and vary by age, gender, race/ethnicity, smoking, and exposure to environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) at home and other indoor environments. Data from NHANES for 2013-2018 for US children aged 3-11 years (N = 3834), nonsmoker (N = 1963) and smoker (N = 247) adolescents aged 12-19 years, and nonsmoker (N = 10,334) and smoker (N = 3264) adults aged ≥ 20 years were analyzed by fitting regression models with log10 transformed values of serum cotinine and hydroxycotinine as dependent variables. Models stratified by age and smoking status were fitted. Those reporting using tobacco products during the last 5 days were classified as smokers. For cotinine, males had higher cotinine concentrations than females for children, adolescent smokers, and nonsmoker adults. Non-Hispanic Blacks were found to have lower concentrations of both cotinine and hydroxycotinine than non-Hispanic Whites for adult smokers (p < 0.01) only. The ratio of concentrations of those exposed to ETS at home to those not exposed to ETS at home for hydroxycotinine was 6.3 for nonsmoker adults and as low as 1.39 for adult smokers.
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