ABSTRACT:
Sampling private wells at past homes to estimate arsenic
exposure: a methodologic study in New England
We are conducting a collaborative, population-based case-control
study in Maine, New Hampshire, and Vermont to investigate
the reasons for the elevated bladder cancer mortality in
northern New England. Arsenic in drinking water is one of
the primary exposures under investigation. To estimate subjects'
lifetime exposure to waterborne arsenic, it will be necessary
to obtain water samples from private wells that subjects
used in the past. We conducted a methodologic study to assess
the feasibility of locating and sampling from private wells
at subjects' past residences. Ninety-eight New Hampshire
residents (mean age 67 years) completed a questionnaire
requesting the complete address, dates of occupancy, and
drinking water sources for each home lived in since birth.
An interviewer then asked subjects for more detailed information
about each home to assist in a field search of past homes
in the three-state study area of Maine, New Hampshire, and
Vermont. Fifty-eight of the 98 subjects indicated that they
had used a total of 103 private wells in 95 previous homes
located in these three states. We conducted a field search
to locate these 95 homes, visited town offices to find the
properties on tax maps and obtain the current owners' names
and addresses, attempted to obtain permission from the current
owners to sample the wells, and collected water samples.
In all, 48 (47%) of the 103 past wells in the study area
were sampled successfully. The remaining wells were not
sampled because the homes were not located (22%) or had
been demolished (2%), permission to sample the wells was
not obtained (17%), the wells had been destroyed (7%) or
could not be found on the grounds of the residence (3%),
or for other reasons (2%). Various approaches for improving
the success rates for sampling water from private wells
are discussed, as is the use of predictive modeling to impute
exposures when sampling is not feasible.
Colt JS, Baris D, Clark SF, Ayotte JD, Ward M, Nuckols JR,
Cantor KP, Silverman DT, Karagas MR. Sampling private wells
at past homes to estimate arsenic exposure: a methodologic
study in New England. J Expo Anal Environ Epidemiol, 12: 329-334,
2002.