(Press-News.org) In a new study, researchers found high levels of ultrashort-chain per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) in blood samples taken from Wilmington, N.C. residents between 2010-2016. Two ultrashort-chain PFAS – perfluoromethoxyacetic acid (PFMOAA) and trifluoracetic acid (TFA) – were detected at high levels in almost every sample. In contrast, GenX – the chemical that jumpstarted public concern about PFAS in the Cape Fear River Basin – was detected in 20% of the samples. The work adds to the body of evidence that short-chain PFAS can accumulate in the human body.
Ultrashort-chain PFAS such as PFMOAA and TFA have not been well-studied in people for two reasons: they were not thought to bioaccumulate due to their chemical structure, and until recently there were no analytical methods that allowed scientists to reliably detect them in blood.
“With the development of analytical methods targeting ultrashort-chain PFAS, researchers have found these compounds to be the dominant PFAS in environmental matrices including water and human blood,” says Detlef Knappe, professor of civil, construction, and environmental engineering at NC State and co-corresponding author of the study. “Given the long history of PFAS exposure in Wilmington, we wanted to look for these compounds in historical water and blood samples of residents.”
In 2016, NC State and U.S. Environmental Protection Agency researchers published findings highlighting high concentrations of several PFAS, including GenX, in Wilmington residents’ drinking water. The Fayetteville Works plant, an upstream chemical facility, had been releasing PFAS into the Cape Fear River, the city’s primary drinking water source, since 1980. After 2017, the chemical manufacturer was required to control PFAS discharges into the river and air.
For the current study, the researchers looked for 56 different PFAS in water samples from the Cape Fear River taken in 2017 as well as in 119 adult blood serum samples from a UNC biobank that were collected between 2010-2016. The serum samples were anonymized, but all were taken from residents in and around the Wilmington area.
The findings were surprising. In the blood serum, 34 of the 56 PFAS were detected in at least one serum sample. Five PFAS accounted for 85% of the total found in the samples. PFMOAA had the highest median concentration at 42 nanograms per milliliter (ng/mL), comprising 42% of the summed total, followed by TFA (17 ng/mL), PFOS (14 ng/mL), PFOA (6.2 ng/mL), and PFPrA (5.4 ng/mL).
Additionally, they found that TFA comprised 70% of the total PFAS in the 2017 water sample, with a concentration of 110,000 nanograms per liter (ng/L). PFMOAA had a concentration of 38,000 ng/L. While TFA has a variety of sources, including fluorinated refrigerants, the publication highlights that Fayetteville Works was the dominant source of both TFA and PFMOAA in the lower Cape Fear River.
“For reference, one European guideline recommends a drinking water level of 2200 ng/L for TFA,” Knappe says. “Our sample contained over 50 times that concentration.”
“These data gave us a ‘timestamp’ of exposure before people knew their drinking water was contaminated,” says Jane Hoppin, professor of biological sciences, principal investigator of the GenX Exposure Study, member of NC State’s Center for Human Health and the Environment (CHHE), and co-corresponding author of the paper describing the work.
“The conventional wisdom is that short-chain PFAS are of lesser concern because they don’t bioaccumulate, but what we’re seeing is that they can occur at high levels in people,” Hoppin adds. “These results point out the need to start thinking about how to study the human health effects of these PFAS, particularly TFA and PFMOAA.
“The other issue is how limited the human health data are for any of these chemicals. Most chemicals in the PFAS class affect the liver and immune system, but this work is still in its infancy in many cases.”
Next steps include analyzing samples from the GenX Exposure Study for TFA and PFMOAA levels.
“The sample set gives us a glimpse into the past,” Hoppin says. “Seeing what the levels are now will help us determine how these chemicals accumulate in the body and what their health effects might be.”
The study appears in Environmental Science and Technology and was supported by research funding from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (1R21ES029353, P42ES0310095), Center for Human Health and the Environment (CHHE) at NC State University (P30ES025128), and the North Carolina Collaboratory at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill with funding appropriated by the North Carolina General Assembly. Other NC State collaborators were Lan Cheng, Sarah Teagle, Jeffrey R. Enders and Rebecca A. Weed. Hazel B. Nichols from UNC-Chapel Hill’s Gillings School of Public Health also contributed to the work.
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Note to editors: An abstract follows.
“Historical Blood Serum Samples from Wilmington, North Carolina: The Importance of Ultrashort-Chain Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances”
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.5c08146
Authors: Lan Cheng, Sarah Teagle, Jeffrey R. Enders, Rebecca A. Weed, Detlef R.U. Knappe, Jane A. Hoppin, North Carolina State University; Hazel B. Nichols, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Published: Oct. 27 in Environmental Science and Technology
Abstract:
From 1980 to 2017, Wilmington, North Carolina (NC), residents unknowingly consumed high levels of PFAS through drinking water. Some of these PFAS are expected to have short biological half-lives, and current biological sampling will miss these exposures. To assess historical PFAS exposures, we (1) determined PFAS levels in serum samples of Wilmington, NC residents obtained during the years 2010−2016, (2) examined temporal trends of serum PFAS over this period, and (3) associated serum PFAS levels with PFAS concentrations in drinking water. We quantified 56 PFAS, including ultrashort-chain PFAS, in 119 adult human serum samples and 47 PFAS in water samples from 2017. Twenty PFAS were detected in >50% of serum samples; perfluoromethoxyacetic acid (PFMOAA) and trifluoroacetic acid (TFA) exhibited the highest median concentrations (PFMOAA: 42 ng/mL; TFA: 17 ng/mL). PFMOAA and TFA were also the dominant PFAS in Wilmington drinking water, accounting for 95% of quantifiable PFAS. The serum-to-water ratio was linearly correlated with “effective” PFAS chain length, indicating that PFAS with longer chain length and a sulfonic acid group are more bioaccumulative. While chain length is important for bioaccumulation, this study highlights that exposures to high concentrations of ultrashort-chain PFAS in drinking water contribute to their dominance in human serum.
END
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