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. 2022 Sep 29;130(9):096002. doi: 10.1289/EHP9934

Table 1.

Characteristics of Latin American and the Caribbean studies on pesticide exposure and health outcomes published between 2007 and 2021 (n=233).

Characteristic n (%)
Study countrya
 Argentina 21 (8.9)
 Bolivia 6 (2.6)
 Brazil 88 (37.4)
 Chile 7 (3.0)
 Colombia 9 (3.8)
 Costa Rica 14 (6.0)
 Dominican Republic 1 (0.4)
 Ecuador 17 (7.2)
 El Salvador 1 (0.4)
 Guadeloupe 14 (6.0)
 Jamaica 1 (0.4)
 Mexico 46 (19.6)
 Nicaragua 4 (1.7)
 Paraguay 1 (0.4)
 Peru 2 (0.8)
 Venezuela 3 (1.3)
Study design
 Cohort 41 (17.5)
 Cross sectional 167 (71.7)
 Case–control 25 (10.7)
Study population
 Farmworkers 105 (45.1)
 Other workers (e.g., vector control program workers) 9 (3.9)
 General population 38 (16.3)
 Mother–child pairs 27 (11.6)
 Pregnant women only 6 (2.6)
 Children only 48 (20.6)
Pesticide exposure assessment methodb,c
 Indirect
  Questionnaire only 103 (43.1)
  Other (e.g., job status ascertained via death certificate or surveillance system, residential proximity) 9 (3.8)
 Direct
  Cholinesterase activityd 57 (23.8)
  Pesticides or pesticide metabolites measured in biological matrix 70 (29.3)
Biological matrix used for pesticide exposure assessmente
 Blood 99 (73.9)
 Breast milk 2 (1.5)
 Hair 4 (3.0)
 Urine 28 (20.9)
 Toenail 1 (0.7)
Pesticides assessedf
 Insecticides in general (no class specified) 5 (1.6)
 Organophosphates 81 (26.2)
 Organophosphates and carbamatesg 20 (6.5)
 Organochlorines 46 (14.9)
 Pyrethroids 20 (6.5)
 Neonicotinoids 2 (0.6)
 Herbicides 21 (6.8)
 Fungicides 11 (3.6)
 Larvicides 1 (0.3)
 Rodenticides 1 (0.3)
 Natural pesticides 1 (0.3)
 Multiple pesticide classes (unspecified) 100 (32.3)
Main health outcomesh
 Genotoxicity 62 (24.0)
 Neurobehavioral outcomes 54 (20.9)
 Placental outcomes and teratogenicity 13 (5.1)
 Cancer 14 (5.4)
 Thyroid function 16 (6.2)
 Reproductive outcomes 16 (6.2)
 Birth outcomes and child growth 13 (5.1)
 Other effects 70 (27.1)
  Kidney functioni 9 (3.5)
  Respiratory and allergic outcomesi 7 (2.7)
  Liver injuryi 8 (3.1)
  Hematological parameters and lipid profilei 17 (6.6)
  Acoustic damagei 8 (3.1)
  Othersi 26 (10.1)
a

n>233 because one published study (Maluf et al.245) was conducted in three countries (Argentina, Brazil, and Mexico).

b

A total of 125 published studies employed direct exposure assessment methods, with some measuring both cholinesterase activity and pesticide metabolites concentrations. Of these, 81 (65.3%) used data from the direct exposure assessment in exposure–outcome analyses (e.g., some studies measured urinary biomarkers of exposure and ascertained occupational status via questionnaire but only reported exposure–outcome associations using occupational status).

c

n>233 because some published studies employed more than one exposure assessment method (e.g., measurement of cholinesterase activity in blood and urinary pesticide metabolites).

d

A total of 57 published studies measured cholinesterase activity only; 4 studies measured cholinesterase activity in addition to other pesticide metabolites.

e

Only for published studies with direct pesticide exposure assessment, but nine studies measured pesticides in more than one biological matrix.

f

n>233 because some published studies assessed multiple pesticide groups.

g

Exposure assessed via acetylcholinesterase activity monitoring and authors did not differentiate if they were primarily examining organophosphates or carbamates.

h

n>233 because some published studies assessed outcomes from more than one group.

i

Proportion of published studies that assessed this outcome out of all the studies included in the review (n=233); total studies that assessed other health effects >70 because some assessed multiple outcomes in this category (e.g., several published studies examined liver injury and hematological parameters).