Abstract
Introduction
We report on the analysis of 4,4′-dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (4,4′-DDT) and its metabolites in thatch and branch samples constituting the wall materials of dwellings from South African subtropical areas. This approach was used to assess the exposure to DDT in the residents of the dwellings after indoor residual spraying (IRS) following recommended sanitation practices against malaria vectors.
Discussion
Examination of the distributions of DDT compounds (2,4′-DDT, 4,4′-DDT and its metabolites) in 43 dwellings from the area of Manhiça (Mozambique) has shown median concentrations of 19, 130, and 23 ng/g for 2,4′-DDT, 4,4′-DDT, and 4,4′-DDE, respectively, in 2007 when IRS implementation was extensive. The concentrations of these compounds at the onset of the IRS campaign (n = 48) were 5.5, 47, and 2.2 ng/g, respectively. The differences were statistically significant and showed an increase in the concentration of this insecticide and its metabolites. Calculation of 4,4′-DDT in the indoor air resulting from the observed concentrations in the wall materials led to the characteristic values of environments polluted with this insecticide.
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1 Introduction
Indoor residual spraying (IRS) is one of the primary interventions for vector control in the efforts for reducing malaria transmission. Accordingly, long-acting chemical insecticides are sprayed on the walls and roofs of all structures in a determined area to kill the mosquitoes that land and rest there (Montgomery et al. 2010). Dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT) is one of the most effective insecticides due to its persistence and relatively low cost; it either kills mosquitoes resting on the walls or repels them from dwelling. IRS with DDT is still recommended by WHO (2006, 2007), and at present, it is an important source and direct input of the insecticide residues in African domestic environments (van Dyk et al. 2010; Sereda et al. 2009). Because of its toxicity, DDT use is at present restricted to public health purposes (UNEP 2008).
Residents are exposed to DDT through their daily activities in and around the house (Van Dyk et al. 2010). Various studies have shown high DDT levels in the environment and populations of areas where DDT has been applied in IRS programs for malaria control (Van Dyk et al. 2010; Röllin et al. 2009; Barnhoorn et al. 2009; Yáñez et al. 2002). They included measurements of the concentrations of this compound in indoor air, floor dust, outdoor soil, birds, sediment, food, and water (Van Dyk et al. 2010; Barnhoorn et al. 2009; Singh et al. 1992). However, the insecticide residues remaining in the thatch and branches (usually stems of Typha plants, particularly Typha latifolia) of the wall materials of many dwellings (many of them also covered by daub) remain to be quantified in rural areas of malaria endemic African countries. In Mozambique, these materials are sprayed directly during IRS and constitute the DDT standing stock after application. Partial volatilization of the insecticide accumulated in the walls likely determines the DDT indoor air concentrations and therefore contribute to the exposure of inhabitants
At the end of 2005, house spraying with DDT in Mozambique was reintroduced in public health programs. This compound has now become the main insecticide for malaria vector control because no resistance to DDT has been detected in Mozambican mosquitoes (Casimiro et al. 2006; 2007). In the Manhiça district, in particular, DDT was reintroduced for IRS in 2006.
The present study describes the analysis of DDT levels in wall materials with the purpose of assessing the exposure of dwelling residents to the insecticide after implementation of IRS as a public health tool for malaria vector control. The study was carried out in dwellings from the Manhiça district, a rural area of southern Mozambique. This subtropical area provides a representative example of the current exposure levels associated with IRS in people living in thatch-walled huts.
2 Materials and methods
2.1 Study area
The Manhiça district is located in the north of the Maputo province, 80 km from the capital city (Maputo), and has 159,000 inhabitants. There are two distinct seasons: one warm and rainy between November and April and another dry and cooler for the rest of the year. Most of the inhabitants are farmers who grow sugar cane, banana, and rice and some work in two nearby big sugar cane factories. The typical houses in the Manhiça area are cylindrical, with diameters and height of about 6 and 2 m, respectively. They are mostly made of reeds with roofs of corrugated zinc or thatch. The thatches from the roofs of the houses are usually replaced every 4 years. These dwellings are similar to others studied in Vhembe District (Limpopo Province, South Africa; van Dyk et al. 2010) that are also built in a compact circular arrangement (diameter 3–5 m). Their roofs are also made of thatch and the walls consist of a mixture of mud and cement.
The DDT used for IRS is a 75% wettable powder (CAS register number 59-29-3). One sachet of 670 g of DDT is mixed into a portable sprayer with 10 L of water and shaken before spraying. This is done by the IRS spray teams from the Mozambique Ministry of Health (MISAU).
Typical dwellings in Manhiça involve a total wall and roof surface area of about 38 and 28 m2, respectively. In the current IRS practice, about 3 g/m2 of DDT is sprayed, which involves about 200 g per regular dwelling.
2.2 Sample collection
The dwelling thatch samples included in the study were collected in May 2006 (n = 48) and February–March 2007 (n = 43) and were taken from the same dwellings. In September 2006, the Mozambique Ministry of Health (MISAU) through the National Malaria Control Program expanded the IRS with DDT into the Manhiça district through the National Malaria Control Program. The samples were collected, placed in sterile and resistant polyester bags (Kapak Corporation, Minneapolis, MN, USA), sealed using a heat sealer, and stored at −20°C until extraction.
Ethics approval for the study was obtained from the National Mozambican Ethics Review Committee. Informed consent was obtained from all owners of the dwellings prior to thatch collection.
2.3 Chemicals analysis
Standards of tetrabromobenzene (TBB); polychlorobiphenyls (PCB) 142, 200, 209; and DDTs were purchased from Dr. Ehrenstorfer (Augsburg, Germany). All standard solutions were prepared in isooctane for organic trace analysis (Merck, Darmstadt, Germany). Analytical grade concentrated sulfuric acid, dichloromethane (DCM), methanol, cyclohexane, and n-hexane were also from Merck.
2.4 Extraction procedures
Samples were thawed at room temperature before extraction. Then, they were minced by stainless steel scissors and homogenized with liquid nitrogen in mortars. About 0.5–2.5 g of the homogenized material was put in 25 mL tubes and extracted with DCM/hexane (1:4). TBB, PCB 209, and PCB 200 were added as surrogate standards, and the mixture was vortexed stirred for 1 min at 2,000 rpm for homogenization. Extraction was performed after addition of 20 mL of solvent mixture and sonication for 20 min and subsequent centrifugation for 5 min at 2,000 rpm. This last step was repeated three times. The combined extract of 60 mL of solvent was reduced to 1 mL by vacuum rotary evaporation operated at 30°C. The solution was transferred into a 10-mL centrifuge tube using several rinses of n-hexane (approximately 3 mL), and 2 mL of concentrated sulfuric acid was added. After reaction, the mixture was stirred for 30 s, centrifuged for 10 min, and the remaining sulfuric acid solution was discarded. Subsequent cleanup with concentrated sulfuric acid was done. The supernatant n-hexane phase was transferred to a conical tube and reduced to nearly dryness under a gentle nitrogen flow. The extract was transferred to gas chromatography (GC) vials with four 25 μL rinses of isooctane. Before injection, it was re-evaporated under nitrogen, and 100 μL of a PCB142 standard was added as injection standard (Grimalt et al. 2010).
2.5 GC analysis
The concentrations of 2,4′-DDT, 4,4′-DDT, 2,4′-DDE, 4,4′-DDE, 2,4′-DDD, and 4,4′-DDD were determined by GC with electron capture detection (Hewlett Packard 6890N GC-ECD). Samples were injected (2 μL) in splitless mode onto a 60-m DB-5 column protected with a retention gap (J&W Scientific, Folsom, CA, USA). The temperature program started at 90°C (held for 2 min) and increased to 140°C at 20°C/min, then to 200°C (held for 13 min) at 4°C/min, and finally to 310°C (held for 10 min) at 4°C/min. Injector, ion source, and transfer line temperatures were 250°C, 176°C, and 280°C, respectively.
The quantification procedure is described in detail elsewhere (Garí and Grimalt 2010). The identification of organochlorine compounds was based on retention time. Selected samples were analyzed by GC coupled to mass spectrometry for structural confirmation. Calibration straight lines were obtained for all analytes. These standard solutions also contained the injection standards. Quantification was performed by the external standard method using these calibration lines and recovery (TBB and PCB-209) and injection (PCB-142) standards. The use of PCB-142 to correct for volume allows differentiating between corrections due to analyte losses by sample handling and volume variations in the final solvent rinsings for sample introduction into the chromatographic vials. Thus, the recovery standards are also corrected by the injection standard. Limits of detection (LOD) and quantification (LOQ) were calculated from blanks. One blank was included in each sample batch. LOD = mean of all blanks + 3 times the standard deviations. LOQ = mean + 10 times the standard deviation. When the compound was absent from the blanks, LOD and LOQ were determined from instrumental limits of detection using injection of dilutions of standards.
Concentrations below LOQ were substituted by half of the LOD. Univariate statistics were calculated as customary (Rothman et al. 2008). This method performed satisfactorily in repeated international intercalibration exercises within the Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Programme (AMAP 2008). Total DDTs (∑DDT) were calculated by the sum of the concentrations of 4,4′-DDT, 2,4′-DDT, 4,4′-DDE, 2,4′-DDE, 4,4′-DDD, and 2,4′-DDD. The DDT/DDE ratio was calculated by the division of 4,4′-DDE by 4,4′-DDT. In order to obtain a normal distribution, data were log-transformed for application of t tests to compare mean concentrations of the same dwellings sampled in 2006 and 2007. All statistical analyses were performed using the Statistical Package for the Social Science (SPSS for Windows version 15), and the figure was produced with GraphPad Prism5. The statistical significance was set at p < 0.05 (two sided).
3 Results
The variation of the concentrations in the wall materials after IRS could be assessed by replicate sampling of wall materials from different sites in the same dwelling and independent analysis of each collected material (n = 3 or 4; Table 1); this subsampling was done in 2008. The observed standard deviation of 4,4′-DDT concentrations from the same dwelling ranges between 17% and 65% of the mean values. Similar percent values were observed for the standard deviations of 4,4′-DDE and 4,4′-DDD except when the concentrations of some metabolite were found below the limit of detection which involved higher standard deviation values. Within these ranges, the degree of variation between samples from the same dwelling did not seem to be influenced by the absolute concentrations. Table 2 shows the levels of DDTs (nanograms per gram) in thatch samples from this study in Mozambique compared to DDT levels found in similar (but not equivalent) materials in studies conducted in other countries.
Thatch collected in 48 and 43 dwellings in 2006 and 2007, respectively, were analyzed. In 2007, we could not repeat sampling in five dwellings sampled in 2006, and two other dwellings were not sprayed in 2007. In order to perform a close t test mean comparison, we excluded from the calculation of the mean values of 2006 the dwellings that were not sprayed or sampled in 2007. Therefore, the results in Table 3 are just based on 41 thatch pairs. 4,4′-DDT, 2,4′-DDT, 4,4′-DDE, and 4,4′-DDD were quantifiable in 94%, 92%, 98%, and 98% of the samples of the first group, respectively. In the 2007 group, 4,4′-DDT, 2,4′-DDT, 4,4′-DDE, and 4,4′-DDD were found at quantitative levels in 98%, 95%, 93%, and 93% of the samples, respectively. Total DDT concentrations ranged between 0.6 and 6100 ng/g in the materials collected in 2006. The predominant isomer was 4,4′-DDT (median = 49 ng/g) followed by 4,4′-DDD (median = 5.2 ng/g) and 4,4′-DDE (median = 2.2 ng/g). The 2,4′-isomers for DDE, DDD, and DDT (0.2, 1.0, and 7.5 ng/g, respectively) were in lower concentration than the 4,4′-isomers except in two samples from the 2006 series.
The materials sampled in 2007 were from sprayed dwellings; the concentrations of total DDT ranged between 12 and 29,000 ng/g (Table 3). The predominant isomer was 4,4′-DDT (median = 150 ng/g) followed by 4,4′-DDD (median = 23 ng/g) and 4,4′-DDE (median = 21 ng/g). The concentration of the 2,4′-isomers for DDE, DDD, and DDT (0.3, 5.4, and 21 ng/g, respectively) were lower than those among the 4,4′-isomers. Both in 2006 and 2007, the concentrations exhibited large standard deviations as consequence of the high values in some dwellings. The 2007 dataset exhibited higher maximum concentrations than that of 2006. These high values were consistent with the spraying in September 2006 of the studied dwelling. They showed a strong dispersion in DDT concentration among the different dwellings after IRS.
The concentrations of all DDT isomers and their metabolites were higher in thatch samples collected in year 2007 than in 2006. Comparison of the means of the log-transformed data of these two sample populations shows that their differences were statistically significant in all cases p < 0.05 (Fig. 1). The comparison is useful to support that average concentrations were statistically significantly higher after IRS despite referring to two independent episodes. As mentioned above, the two means referred exactly to the same dwellings before and after IRS.
4 Discussion
In this study, we found that the concentrations of 4,4′-DDT were higher (ten times or more) than those of the other isomers in all samples, except two from the 2006 series. This finding is consistent with recent use of the commercial insecticide. Conversion of 4,4′-DDT into 4,4′-DDE starts after application but the half-life of the former could be years. Accordingly, the historical environmental DDT record is dominated by 4,4′-DDE because this is the most chemically stable metabolite of the insecticide. In Manhiça, dominance of 4,4′-DDT was observed even in samples with low total DDT levels indicating that the whole area has been under the influence of emissions from this insecticide, maybe as consequence of misuses and poor management (MISAU 2006).
Total DDT levels in thatch in 2007 were significantly higher than in 2006 (Table 2). The strong difference may reflect the more widespread application of IRS in 2007 compared to 2006. The 4,4′-DDT levels measured in 2007 were considerably higher than those found in other types of applications such as thatch treated with DDT in Mexico (Waliszewski et al. 2004). However, they were lower than those found in Tanzania in dried hay samples collected in the vicinity of an old storage site, which represented a point source of contamination (Marco and Kishimba 2005). It has been reported that DDT levels increase in commodities stored in rural houses treated with DDT for malaria control (Battu et al. 1989; Singh et al. 1991). The total 4,4′-DDT medians in the Manhiça thatch samples were similar to those found in Indian wheat straw samples stored in dwellings treated with IRS (Battu et al. 1989).
The standard deviation of the 4,4′-DDT distribution in the dwellings as consequence of IRS was in the order of 20–65% of the mean concentration values (Table 1). 4,4′-DDD and 2,4′-DDT exhibited similar values and 4,4′-DDE was the compound of the highest relative standard deviation, 47–120%. These higher values may reflect dissimilar 4,4′-DDT transformation after spraying. The observed 4,4′-DDE variability may correspond to the accumulated dispersion resulting from the irregular distribution of the insecticide due to IRS and from compound transformation.
Part of the DDT adsorbed in the thatch evaporates into the dwellings. The concentrations in the wall materials can be used to estimate these levels in the indoor air using the octanol–air constant, K OA = C O/C A = 109.31 for 35°C (Shen and Wania 2005). This expression can be transformed to reflect the concentrations in air, C air,eq, from the concentrations in thatch, C thatch, as follows: C air,eq = C thatch/(f × K OA/d), which provides an estimate of the equilibrium indoor air concentrations (C air,eq). f is the lipid fraction in thatch (0.01), and d is the octanol density (0.8 kg/L). Having in mind kinetic aspects and a partial renewal of the atmosphere in the dwellings, more realistic estimates could be operationally defined as 50% of C air,eq.
Thus, according to these calculations, the median 4,4′-DDT concentrations of 2006 and 2007 (Table 3) correspond to air concentrations of 5.5 and 27 ng/m3, respectively, and the maximum concentrations observed in 2006 and 2007 correspond to 110 and 410 ng/m3, respectively. Studies of indoor 4,4′-DDT spraying with 2 g/m2 under controlled conditions in rooms from dwellings with plaster covered walls and furnished as per normal household practices have shown gas phase air concentrations in the range of 400–8,600 ng/m3, depending on the time of sampling after spraying (1 h–240 days; Singh et al. 1992). In contrast, remote areas exhibit open air concentrations of 4,4′-DDT in the order of 0.01–0.001 ng/m3 or even less (van Drooge et al. 2002, 2004). A study of DDT contamination due to IRS for malarian control in two districts of South Africa showed indoor air concentrations in the ranges of 750–6,000 ng/m3 (mean 2200 ng/m3) and 1.5–28 ng/m3 (mean 7.2 ng/m3) in treated and untreated dwellings, respectively. The calculated values in Mozambique are consistent with these previously described air concentrations (van Dyk et al. 2010). They suggest that clear DDT exposure through inhalation is a probable mechanism for exposure of their inhabitants. Other exposure routes could be related to dust or particles falling from the treated walls or roofs of the dwellings, e.g., DDT has been found in floor dust (van Dyk et al. 2010). These particles could eventually be inhaled through respiration or ingested if they become mixed with food or water.
5 Conclusions
Measurement of the concentrations of DDT and its metabolites adsorbed onto the thatch and branches of the wall materials provide useful information to estimate the exposure levels of the residents from the dwellings in which this insecticide has been sprayed. Analysis of these wall materials in dwellings from Manhiça has shown higher concentrations of 4,4′-DDT than its metabolites, including 4,4′-DDE, in all cases except two from the 2006 series. Independently of absolute concentrations, the dominance of the former compound evidences that the origin of the former compound is related with the recent use of this insecticide.
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Acknowledgments
We thank all the families for their participation in the study and the staff of the Manhiça Health Research Center for their support during data and sample collection. We thank E. de Trincheria for her kind support with the chemical analysis of the samples collected in 2006. We also thank Mr. Sergio Gomane (IRS National Focal Point from MISAU) and Eng. Samson Cuamba (National Disposal Project Coordinator from the Mozambican Ministry of Agriculture) for information on DDT use for malaria control. MNM is funded by a Ph.D. Scholarship from Fundació Marfà. CD is supported by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (MICINN; RYC-2008-02631). The Centro de Investigaçao em Saúde da Manhiça receives core support from the Spanish Agency for International Cooperation and Development (AECID). Funding was received from MICINN (INMA G03/176, Consolider Ingenio GRACCIE, CSD2007-00067), CSIC (PIF06-053), and ArcRisk EU Project (FP7-ENV-2008-1-226534). The CISM receives core support from the AECID.
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Open Access This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0), which permits any noncommercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author(s) and source are credited.
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Manaca, M.N., Grimalt, J.O., Gari, M. et al. Assessment of exposure to DDT and metabolites after indoor residual spraying through the analysis of thatch material from rural African dwellings. Environ Sci Pollut Res 19, 756–762 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11356-011-0601-6
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11356-011-0601-6