Title of article :
Detection of carcinogenic aromatic amines in the urine
of non-smokers
Author/Authors :
Gernot Grimmer، نويسنده , , Gerhard Dettbarn، نويسنده , , Albrecht SeidelU، نويسنده , , J¨urgen Jacob، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
هفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2000
Abstract :
Smoking is thought to be one of the most important anthropogenic risk factors involved in the development of
urinary bladder cancer in humans. Tobacco smoke contains a complex mixture of chemicals including potent
carcinogens such as aromatic amines. In the present study the amounts of several freebase aromatic amines including
the potent carcinogens 2-aminonaphthalene and 4-aminobiphenyl have been analyzed in the urine of 48 German
urban living smokers and non-smokers. The results indicate that i. both groups excrete the identical set of four
aromatic amines; ii. smokers excrete approximately twice the total amount of these amines, but similar amounts of
2-aminonaphthalene and 4-aminobiphenyl are found in non-smokers; and iii. the excreted aromatic amines are
decomposed in the urine within a few hours thus, explaining why aromatic amines are difficult to detect in this
matrix. Their decomposition could be prevented by adding small amounts of p-toluidine to the freshly collected
urine. Unlike smokers the origin of aromatic amines detected in the urine of non-smokers is at present unknown.
Based on the cotinine levels found in the urine of non-smokers environmental tobacco smoke can be excluded as a
major source of aromatic amines. In addition, neither diesel exhaust-related nitroarenes nor the corresponding
amino-derivatives, to which they may be metabolically converted, were found. The detected urinary levels of aromatic
amines arising from sources other than tobacco smoke or diesel exhaust may play a role in the bladder cancer
etiology of non-smokers.
Keywords :
Mass spectrometry , Non-smokers , smokers , aromatic amines , bladder cancer , gas chromatography , Tobacco smoking
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment