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4736614 
Journal Article 
Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances and fluorinated alternatives in urine and serum by on-line solid phase extraction-liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry 
Kato, K; Kalathil, AA; Patel, AM; Ye, X; Calafat, AM 
2018 
Yes 
Chemosphere
ISSN: 0045-6535
EISSN: 1879-1298 
209 
338-345 
English 
is supplemented by 11374636 : Supporting information
Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), man-made chemicals with variable length carbon chains containing the perfluoroalkyl moiety (CnF2n+1-), are used in many commercial applications. Since 1999-2000, several long-chain PFAS, including perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) and perfluorooctanoate (PFOA), have been detected at trace levels in the blood of most participants of the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES)-representative samples of the U.S. general population-while short-chain PFAS have not. Lower detection frequencies and concentration ranges may reflect lower exposure to short-chain PFAS than to PFOS or PFOA or that, in humans, short-chain PFAS efficiently eliminate in urine. We developed on-line solid phase extraction-HPLC-isotope dilution-MS/MS methods for the quantification in 50 μL of urine or serum of 15 C3-C11 PFAS (C3 only in urine), and three fluorinated alternatives used as PFOA or PFOS replacements: GenX (ammonium salt of 2,3,3,3,-tetrafluoro-2-(1,1,2,2,3,3,3-heptafluoropropoxy)-propanoate, also known as HFPO-DA), ADONA (ammonium salt of 4,8-dioxa-3H-perfluorononanoate), and 9Cl-PF3ONS (9-chlorohexadecafluoro-3-oxanonane-1-sulfonate), main component of F53-B. Limit of detection for all analytes was 0.1 ng/mL. To validate the method, we analyzed 50 commercial urine/serum paired samples collected in 2016 from U.S. volunteers with no known exposure to the chemicals. In serum, detection frequency and concentration patterns agreed well with those from NHANES. By contrast, except for perfluorobutanoate, we did not detect long-chain or short-chain PFAS in urine. Also, we did not detect fluorinated alternatives in either urine or serum. Together, these results suggest limited exposure to both short-chain PFAS and select fluorinated alternatives in this convenience population. 
PFAS; Urine; Short-chain PFAS; PFESAs 
PFAS
• Additional PFAS (formerly XAgency)
     Literature Search November 2019
          PubMed
          Web of Science
     Screened Studies
          Supplemental
     4,8-Dioxa-3H-perfluorononanoic acid
     Ammonium 4,8-dioxa-3H-perfluorononanoate
• Expanded PFAS SEM (formerly PFAS 430)
     Litsearch: September 2019
          PubMed
          Web of Science
     Screened Studies
          Excluded
               Exclude (TIAB)
     Perfluorooctane
     Potassium perfluorooctanoate
     Sodium perfluorooctanoate
     Ammonium 4,8-dioxa-3H-perfluorononanoate
     Perfluoro(2-((6-chlorohexyl)oxy)ethanesulfonic acid)
• GenX Chemicals (CASRN 13252-13-6 and CASRN 62037-80-3)
     LitSearch - GenX: July 2017 - Feb 2019
          PubMed
          WoS
     LitSearch GenX Ammonium Salt: Feb 2018 - Feb 2019
          PubMed
          WoS
• PFAS 150
     Literature Search Update December 2020
          PubMed
          WOS
     Literature Search August 2019
          PubMed
          Web of Science
     Screened Studies
          Excluded
               Exclude (TIAB)
     Ammonium perfluoro-2-methyl-3-oxahexanoate
     Ammonium perfluorooctanoate
     Perfluorinated compounds
     Perfluoro(2-methyl-3-oxahexanoyl) fluoride
     Perfluoro-2-methyl-3-oxahexanoic acid
     Perfluorooctane
     Perfluorooctanesulfonic acid
     Perfluorooctanoic acid
• PFBA
     Literature Search Update 5/2019
          PubMed
          WOS
     Scopus: April 2021
• PFNA
     PFNA Literature Search pre-2019
          WOS
     Literature Search
          Pubmed
     PFNA May 2019 Update
          Pubmed
     Title and Abstract Screening
          Excluded
               Not relevant to PECO
• PFOA (335-67-1) and PFOS (1763-23-1)
     Literature Search Update (2013-2019)
          PubMed
          WOS