Twenty-Four Hour Human Urine and Serum Profiles of Bisphenol A during High-Dietary Exposure

2011 
By virtue of its binding to steroid hormone receptors, bisphenol A (BPA, the unconjugated bioactive monomer) is hypothesized to be estrogenic when present in sufficient quantities in the body, raising concerns that widespread exposure to BPA may impact human health. To better understand the internal exposure of adult humans to BPA and the relationship between the serum and urinary pharmacokinetics of BPA, a clinical exposure study was conducted. Blood and urine samples were collected approximately hourly over a 24-h period from 20 adult volunteers who ingested 100% of one of three specified meals comprising standard grocery store food items for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. The volunteers’ average consumption of BPA, estimated from the urinary excretion of total BPA (TOTBPA 5 conjugated BPA 1 BPA), was 0.27 mg/kg body weight (range, 0.03‐0.86), 21% greater than the 95th percentile of aggregate exposure in the adult U.S. population. A serum time course of TOTBPA was observable only in individuals with exposures 1.3‐3.9 times higher than the 95th percentile of aggregate U.S. exposure. The TOTBPA urine concentration Tmax was 2.75 h (range, 0.75‐5.75 h) post-meal, lagging the serum concentration Tmax by ~ 1h . SerumTOTBPA area under the curve per unit BPA exposure was between 21.5 and 79.0nM d h d kg/mg BPA. Serum TOTBPA concentrations ranged from less than or equal to limit of detection (LOD, 1.3nM) to 5.7nM and were, on average, 42 times lower than urine concentrations. During these high dietary exposures, TOTBPA concentrations in serum were undetectable in 83% of the 320 samples collected and BPA concentrations were determined to be less than or equal to LOD in all samples.
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