Wristband Personal Passive Samplers and Suspect Screening Methods Highlight Gender Disparities in Chemical Exposures.
Nicholas J HerkertGordon J GetzingerKate HoffmanAnna S YoungJoseph G AllenJessica L LevasseurP Lee FergusonHeather M StapletonPublished in: Environmental science & technology (2024)
Wristband personal samplers enable human exposure assessments for a diverse range of chemical contaminants and exposure settings with a previously unattainable scale and cost-effectiveness. Paired with nontargeted analyses, wristbands can provide important exposure monitoring data to expand our understanding of the environmental exposome. Here, a custom scripted suspect screening workflow was developed in the R programming language for feature selection and chemical annotations using gas chromatography-high-resolution mass spectrometry data acquired from the analysis of wristband samples collected from five different cohorts. The workflow includes blank subtraction, internal standard normalization, prediction of chemical uses in products, and feature annotation using multiple library search metrics and metadata from PubChem, among other functionalities. The workflow was developed and validated against 104 analytes identified by targeted analytical results in previously published reports of wristbands. A true positive rate of 62 and 48% in a quality control matrix and wristband samples, respectively, was observed for our optimum set of parameters. Feature analysis identified 458 features that were significantly higher on female-worn wristbands and only 21 features that were significantly higher on male-worn wristbands across all cohorts. Tentative identifications suggest that personal care products are a primary driver of the differences observed.
Keyphrases
- high resolution mass spectrometry
- gas chromatography
- liquid chromatography
- electronic health record
- quality control
- mass spectrometry
- tandem mass spectrometry
- ultra high performance liquid chromatography
- machine learning
- deep learning
- endothelial cells
- healthcare
- adverse drug
- big data
- palliative care
- emergency department
- autism spectrum disorder
- gas chromatography mass spectrometry
- air pollution
- mental health
- cancer therapy
- magnetic resonance imaging
- high resolution
- systematic review
- affordable care act
- pain management
- simultaneous determination
- neural network
- drug delivery
- computed tomography
- climate change
- contrast enhanced