A harmonized protocol for an international multicenter prospective study of nanotechnology workers: the NanoExplore cohort

Nanotoxicology. 2023 Feb;17(1):1-19. doi: 10.1080/17435390.2023.2180220. Epub 2023 Mar 16.

Abstract

Nanotechnology applications are fast-growing in many industrial fields. Consequently, health effects of engineered nanomaterials (ENMs) should be investigated. Within the EU-Life project NanoExplore, we developed a harmonized protocol of an international multicenter prospective cohort study of workers in ENM-producing companies. This article describes the development of the protocol, sample size calculation, data collection and management procedures and discusses its relevance with respect to research needs. Within this protocol, workers' ENM exposure will be assessed over four consecutive working days during the initial recruitment campaign and the subsequent follow-up campaigns. Biomonitoring using noninvasive sampling of exhaled breath condensate (EBC), exhaled air, and urine will be collected before and after 4-day exposure monitoring. Both exposure and effect biomarkers, will be quantified along with pulmonary function tests and diagnosed diseases reported using a standardized epidemiological questionnaire available in four languages. Until now, this protocol was implemented at seven companies in Switzerland, Spain and Italy. The protocol is well standardized, though sufficiently flexible to include company-specific conditions and occupational hygiene measures. The recruitment, to date, of 140 participants and collection of all data and samples, enabled us launching the first international cohort of nanotechnology workers. All companies dealing with ENMs could join the NanoExplore Consortium, apply this harmonized protocol and enter in the cohort, concieved as an open cohort. Its protocol meets all requirements of a hypotheses-driven prospective study, which will assess and reassess effects of ENM exposure on workers' health by updating the follow-up of the cohort. New hypothesis could be also considered.

Keywords: Nanotechnology workers; effect biomarkers; engineered nanomaterials; exposure assessment; nano-objects.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Biological Monitoring
  • Humans
  • Multicenter Studies as Topic
  • Nanostructures* / toxicity
  • Nanotechnology
  • Occupational Exposure* / analysis
  • Prospective Studies