Polychlorinated
biphenyls (PCBs) are a group of 209 persistent
organic pollutants, whose documented carcinogenic, neurological, and
respiratory toxicities are expansive and growing. However, PCB inhalation
exposure assessments have been lacking for North American ambient
conditions and lower-chlorinated congeners. We assessed congener-specific
inhalation and dietary exposure for 78 adolescent children and their
mothers (n = 68) in the Airborne Exposure to Semi-volatile
Organic Pollutants (AESOP) Study. Congener-specific PCB inhalation
exposure was modeled using 293 measurements of indoor and outdoor
airborne PCB concentrations at homes and schools, analyzed via tandem
quadrupole GS-MS/MS, combined with questionnaire data from the AESOP
Study. Dietary exposure was modeled using Canadian Total Diet Survey
PCB concentrations and National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey
(NHANES) food ingestion rates. For ∑PCB, dietary exposure dominates.
For individual lower-chlorinated congeners (e.g., PCBs 40+41+71, 52),
inhalation exposure was as high as one-third of the total (dietary+inhalation)
exposure. ∑PCB inhalation (geometric mean (SE)) was greater
for urban mothers (7.1 (1.2) μg yr–1) and
children (12.0 (1.2) μg yr–1) than for rural
mothers (2.4 (0.4) μg yr–1) and children (8.9
(0.3) μg yr–1). Schools attended by AESOP
Study children had higher indoor PCB concentrations than did homes,
and account for the majority of children’s inhalation exposure.
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