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This research project aims at better understanding the early biological effects resulting from occupational exposure to complex Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbon (PAH) mixtures.
Current biomarkers used as part of biomonitoring campaigns are biomarkers of exposure, not numerous and poorly related to health effects.
The aim of this study is thus to improve our understanding of biological consequences of such exposures, both in terms of proteins deregulation, metabolism deregulation and genotoxicity.
Full description
PAHs are ubiquitous pollutants inducing several diseases, among which cancer is the most significant endpoint, with increased incidences of lung, skin, and bladder cancers. PAHs induce genotoxic effects (sister chromatids exchange, micronuclei, DNA damage) but require metabolic activation in humans as indirect-acting carcinogens. Thus, the knowledge of metabolic pathways involved following PAH exposure is critical for understanding and preventing cancer risks. Besides, exposure to PAHs is assumed to induce other adverse health effects (diabetes, inflammation, infertility, cardiovascular disease). Unfortunately, early disease-related biomarkers are still largely unknown and our comprehension about the mechanisms involved is still limited. The rare existing biological limit values either refer to not carcinogenic PAH (pyrene) or detoxification pathways (3-OHBaP for BaP), although new biomarkers reflecting the genotoxic pathway of BaP (TetraolBaP) are now available. There is thus a need for identifying more relevant biomarkers of exposure / effect, and for a better understanding of the biological consequences resulting from PAH exposures as well as the associated metabolic pathways involved.
The objectives of the project are :
The originalities of the project are the following. First, this is a human study performed in real occupational settings on workers exposed to representative PAH mixtures. It is a multidisciplinary approach simultaneously combining up-to-date biomonitoring, omics and cytogenetics analyses, that will give insight into a comprehensive view of metabolic reactions and protein expressions following occupational exposure to PAH mixtures, and allow the identification of the biological processes involved. Carcinogenic BaP metabolites (Tetraol-BaP and 3-OHBaP) will be simultaneously analyzed in order to compare the two main metabolic pathways of BaP.
The main steps of the projects will be :
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100 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Christine DEMEILLIERS, PhD; Renaud PERSOONS, PhD, Pharm D
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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