Objective: Quantitative exposure assessment became more common as a result of attempts to reduce nondifferential exposure misclassification and to observe a steeper exposure-response relationship. Several exposure variables were compared in a demonstration of the exposure-response relationship between neuropsychological abnormality and long-term exposure to organic solvents in workers at one shipyard.
Method: Environmental monitoring and biological monitoring were performed to evaluate the exposure of the workers to organic solvents. Cumulative exposure (CE) and lifetime-weighted average exposure variables were developed with both environmental and biological monitoring data. A neuropsychological questionnaire and a function test for confirmation of a disorder or dysfunction in attention, executive function, visuospatial, and constructional abilities, learning and memory, and psychomotor function were performed.
Results: The abnormal rate in neuropsychological diagnosis was 9.3% in the exposed group, which was much higher than the 2.1% rate obtained in the nonexposed group (P<0.01). The neuropsychological abnormal rate showed a significant dose-response association with CE created with biological monitoring data. The results also suggest that biological monitoring can provide impressive and effective information for quantitative exposure assessment, even in epidemiology studies.