Comparison of Self-Reported Pest Treatments and Insecticide Concentrations in Carpet Dust in the Northern California Childhood Leukemia Study

2014 
Background: Parental self-reported pesticide use has been the usual exposure assessment method in studies of pesticide exposures and childhood leukemia. This approach does not identify active ingredients and may suffer from recall bias. Measuring pesticides in carpet dust is an objective method for determining chemical concentrations in homes and may be a useful exposure indicator for children. Methods: In the Northern California Childhood Leukemia Study, parents of 277 cases and 306 controls were interviewed about household treatment (yes/no) in the prior 12 months for flying insects, fleas/ticks, termites/carpenter ants, lawn/garden insects, and professional indoor and outdoor insect treatments. Carpet dust samples were collected in 2001-2007 and analyzed for nine insecticides using gas chromatography/mass spectrometry. Using multivariable linear regression, we modeled the relationship between log-transformed concentrations of the insecticides and pest treatments, adjusting for home characteristics and ...
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