Pesticide Exposure of Residents Living in Wine Regions: Protocol and First Results of the Pestiprev Study.
Raphaëlle TeysseireEmmanuelle BarronIsabelle BaldiCarole BedosAlexis ChazeaubenyKaryn Le MenachAudrey RoudilHélène BudzinskiFleur DelvaPublished in: International journal of environmental research and public health (2023)
The PESTIPREV study has been designed to investigate residential exposure to pesticides applied to vines and ultimately propose mitigation measures. A feasibility study was carried out to validate a protocol for measuring six pesticides in three houses located near vineyards in July 2020. Samples included indoor and outdoor surfaces sampled with wipes ( n = 214), patches on the resident's skin ( n = 7), hand or foot washing ( n = 5), and pets sampled using wipes ( n = 2). Limits of quantification for wipes ranged between 0.02 ng for trifloxystrobin and 1.50 ng for pyraclostrobin. Tebuconazole and trifloxystrobin were quantified in nearly 100% of the surface samples, whereas the other fungicides were less frequently found (from 39.7% for pyraclostrobin to 55.1% for boscalid). The median surface loadings ranged from 3.13 ng/m 2 for benalaxyl to 82.48 ng/m 2 for cymoxanil. The pesticides most frequently quantified in hand washing, patch samples, and pet wipes were the same as those quantified on surfaces. Finally, the analyses proved to be successful. The tools developed to collect information on determinants were well completed. The protocol was well received by the participants and appeared to be feasible and relevant to the objective of the PESTIPREV study, although some improvements have been identified. It was applied on a larger scale in 2021 to study the determinants of pesticide exposure.