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Microchemical Journal | 2000

Quality assurance in biological monitoring of environmental exposure to pollutants: from reference materials to external quality assessment schemes

Antonio Menditto; S. Palleschi; Anna Minoprio; Barbara Rossi; A. Calibotti; Ferdinando Chiodo; Marina Patriarca

Abstract The presence of chemicals in the environment is a matter of concern in that it poses potential health risks. At present, exposure to toxic chemicals and their biological and biochemical effects can be better estimated by biological monitoring, through the systematic collection of specimens from potentially exposed humans. Biological monitoring of human exposure to environmental pollutants is hampered by the difficulty to assess data reliability. As a consequence, the validity of biological monitoring should depend on the strict implementation of a quality assurance (QA) program, which includes a series of procedures aiming to ensure that laboratory results meet defined standards of quality and are reliable. For the validation and monitoring of methods’ performance, to ensure the trueness of measurements and to warrant the traceability to international standards, reference materials (RMs) and certified reference materials should be used. Internal quality control and external quality assessment (EQA) are part of overall QA and are carried out to verify that analytical errors are compatible with the specific requirements or needs of the user. In particular EQA schemes (EQAS) allow to test independently the analytical performance of participating laboratories. In the last decades, increasing concern has been raised by urban air pollution; lead and benzene, two gasoline components released by motor vehicle exhausts, are known to be toxic to humans. For biological monitoring of lead exposure of the general population, screening campaigns, utilizing lead in blood as a biomarker, have been carried out since the 1970s. Strict strategies were adopted to ensure data comparability, including the preparation of RMs, the organization of EQAS and the cross-exchange and analysis of blood samples between laboratories. Biological monitoring of benzene exposure could be carried out by means of various biomarkers such as benzene in blood and benzene, trans,trans-muconic acid (t,t-MA) and S-phenylmercapturic acid (S-PMA) in urine. At present, few RMs and EQAS are available for these biomarkers. A pilot EQAS for t,t-MA in urine, adopted to assess the reliability of data regarding benzene exposure, has been organized and carried out between 1996 and 1997 in Italy. From the accrued experience, it clearly emerges the importance of strategies designed to guarantee the quality of biological monitoring data. The use of RMs and the participation in EQAS are highly recommended in order to improve the global performance of methods and laboratories involved in biological monitoring.


Environmental Science and Pollution Research | 1996

The international register of potentially toxic chemicals : Challenges of data collection in the field of toxicology.

Sergio Caroli; Antonio Menditto; Ferdinando Chiodo

The benefits and drawbacks consequent to the widespread use of chemicals are inextricably interwoven. According to recent estimates, more than 8 million substances are presently known, 70,000 of which are in common use as industrial compounds, pesticides, Pharmaceuticals, food additives, cosmetics and the like. It is estimated that substances used as such will increase annually by 1000 in number. The deleterious consequences deriving from their exploitation pose tremendous challenges to the scientific community for the protection of human health and the environment. Therefore it is of utmost priority to appropriately select valid information generated in this investigation area and to convey it correctly to users. Here, the adoption of the principles of good laboratory practice in experimental activities is essential, as well as the creation of global networks for data exchange on the safe use of chemicals. The structure and goals of the International Register of Potentially Toxic Chemicals (IRPTC, the database of the United Nations Environment Programme) are detailed to give an example of such an undertaking. Seventeen fields are covered,i.e. identifiers, properties and classification, production/trade, production processes, use, pathways into the environment, concentrations, environmental fate tests, environmental fate, chemobiokinetics, mammalian toxicity, special toxicity studies, effects on organisms in the environment, sampling/preparation/analysis, spills, treatment of poisoning, waste management and recommendations/legal mechanisms.


Mikrochimica Acta | 1996

Blood lead monitoring in Italy: Assessment of the quality of results obtained between 1992 and 1994

Gino Morisi; Marina Patriarca; Ferdinando Chiodo; Anna Minoprio; Antonio Menditto

Between 1992 and 1994, a new screening campaign for blood Pb monitoring in the Italian general population was carried out. Since the first campaign (started in 1978, in accomplishment of the European Community Directive 77/312/EEC) a working group of the Laboratory of Clinical Biochemistry at the Italian National Institute of Health (Istituto Superiore di Sanità), as the Reference Centre (RC), has coordinated the activity of various laboratories spread over the national territory. Appropriate quality assurance procedures, including an external quality assessment scheme (EQAS), were elaborated. Within the EQAS, three or four trials were carried out every year. Each laboratory participating in the trial analyzed eight control samples prepared from cow blood at different Pb concentrations. The results obtained by each peripheral laboratory and the RC between 1992 and 1994 have been compared by regression analysis. The same statistical method was adopted to compare the results obtained by each peripheral laboratory and the RC in the duplicate analysis of about 10 per cent of the human samples collected during the 1992–1994 monitoring campaign. There was no evidence of systematic differences between the regression lines obtained on control and human samples. In spite of the lower Pb concentration in the control samples analyzed during the 1992–1994 campaign, the analytical performance of the laboratories was better than that obtained in the previous screening campaign (1985–1986). Blood Pb levels observed in human samples collected between 1992 and 1994, confirm the downward time trend observed in the campaigns carried out in 1978–1979, 1980–1981 and 1985–1986. This study confirms that the results obtained in an EQAS are representative of the actual performance in the analysis of real (human) samples.


Microchemical Journal | 2000

The Cardbox/Cardview Database for residues in live animals and their products

Sergio Caroli; R. Cresti; M. Spagnoli; M. Alessandrelli; Giovanni Forte; Sonia D'Ilio; Ferdinando Chiodo

The growing interest of the public opinion in environmental problems has resulted in the establishment of national and international norms and regulations. Among others, the protection of human health requires the constant monitoring of several groups of potentially toxic substances as well as of their residues in live animals and their products. For this reason in recent years the European Commission decided to establish four Community Reference Laboratories (CRLs) for the analysis of residues in products of animal origin. The current mandate and operative conditions of the CRLs are described in the Council Directive 96/23/EC of 29 April 1996, which has the goal of promoting and supporting the harmonization of approaches among National Reference Laboratories (NRLs). In this context the CRL at the Istituto Superiore di Sanita of Rome is responsible for chemical elements, organochlorine compounds (including PCBs), carbamates, pyrethroids and organophosphorus compounds. The supply of updated information on the literature of relevance to the tasks of the NRLs is one of the duties of the Rome CRL. To this end, the so-called Cardbox Database has been set up, which for the time being is fully operative for chemical elements and organochlorine compounds.


Microchemical Journal | 2005

Levels of cadmium and lead in blood: an application of validated methods in a group of patients with endocrine/metabolic disorders from the Rome area

Marco Castelli; Barbara Rossi; Federica Corsetti; Alberto Mantovani; Giovanni Spera; Carla Lubrano; Leopoldo Silvestroni; Marina Patriarca; Ferdinando Chiodo; Antonio Menditto


International Journal of Andrology | 2000

News from the European Academy of Andrology Italian Pilot Study for an External Quality Control Scheme in Semen Analysis and Antisperm Antibodies Detection

L. Gandini; Antonio Menditto; Ferdinando Chiodo; Andrea Lenzi


Microchemical Journal | 1998

Diagnostic Potential of Hair Analysis as Applied to the Goldsmith Sector

Sergio Caroli; Oreste Senofonte; N. Violante; Sonia D'Ilio; Stefano Caimi; Ferdinando Chiodo; Antonio Menditto


Microchemical Journal | 1998

Blood Cadmium Levels in Nonexposed Male Subjects Living in the Rome Area: Relationship to Selected Cardiovascular Risk Factors

Antonio Menditto; Ferdinando Chiodo; Marina Patriarca; Gino Morisi; Alessandro Menotti; Amedeo Spagnolo


Annali dell'Istituto Superiore di Sanità | 1996

The Italian external quality assessment scheme for trace element analysis in body fluids

Antonio Menditto; Patriarca M; Ferdinando Chiodo; Morisi G


Annali dell'Istituto Superiore di Sanità | 1998

Esposizione al piombo: valutazione del rischio per la popolazione generale italiana negli anni '90.

Antonio Menditto; Ferdinando Chiodo; Patriarca M; Morisi G

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Antonio Menditto

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Marina Patriarca

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Sergio Caroli

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Gino Morisi

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Anna Minoprio

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Marco Castelli

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Amedeo Spagnolo

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Barbara Rossi

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Federica Corsetti

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Sonia D'Ilio

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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