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Dear mail base:

I will be grateful for
information whether any lab is doing frequent routine monitoring for 
staff regularly exposed to chemotherapeutic agents (e.g. nurses, pharmacist, and
any others exposed regularly to chemotherapy).  Below is a copy and paste
from OSHA standards.  

I will be interested to know
your practice regarding this point.

Many thanks

Mohamed 

 Dr Mohamed Elsammak

Consultant Chemical Pathologist

King Fahd Specialist Hospital Dammam

 

 E. Occupational
Exposure: Biological Evidence of Absorption

1.    
Urinary Mutagenicity 

a.    
Falck et al. were the
first to note evidence of mutagenicity in the urine of nurses who handled
cytotoxic drugs.26 The
extent of this effect increased over the course of the work week. With improved
handling practices, a decrease in mutagenic activity was seen.27
Researchers have also studied pharmacy personnel who reconstitute
antineoplastic drugs. These employees showed increasingly mutagenic urine over
the period of exposure; when they stopped handling the drugs, activity fell
within 2 days to the level of unexposed controls.5,76 They
also found mutagenicity in workers using horizontal laminar flow BSC's that
decreased to control levels with the use of vertical flow containment BSC's.76

b.    
Other studies have failed
to find a relationship between exposure and urine mutagenicity.25 Sorsa99
summarizes this information and discusses the factors, such as differences in
urine collection timing and variations in the use of PPE, which could lead to
disparate results. Differences may also be related to smoking status; smokers
exposed to CD's exhibit greater urine mutagenicity than exposed nonsmokers or
control smokers -- suggesting contamination of the work area by CD's and some
contribution of smoking to their mutagenic profile.9

2.    
Urinary Thioethers are glutathione
conjugated metabolites of alkylating agents, which have been evaluated as an
indirect means of measuring exposure. Workers who handle cytotoxic drugs have
been reported to have increased levels compared to controls and also have
increasing thioether levels over a 5-day work week.44,48 Other
studies of nurses who handle CD's and of treated patients have yielded variable
results, which could be due to confounding by smoking, PPE, and
glutathione-S-transferase activity.11

3.    
Urinary Metabolites. Venitt
assayed the urine of pharmacy and nursing personnel handling cisplatin and
found platinum concentrations at or below the limit of detection for both
workers and controls.112 Hirst
found cyclophosphamide in the urine of two nurses who handled the drug,
documenting worker absorption.35 (Hirst
also documented skin absorption in human volunteers by using gas chromatography
after topical application of the drug.) Urinary pentamidine recovery has also
been reported in exposed health care workers

 		 	   		  

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