Tianshan Shi, Di Li, Donghua Li, Peng Xie, Jin Sun, Tingrong Wang, Rui Li, Zixuan Zou, Zhenjuan Li, Xiaowei Ren
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
It remains unclear whether phthalates are associated with gallstones and whether the associations of phthalate alternatives with gallstones are different from traditional phthalates. In this study, 1735 participants from the NHANES 2017-2018 were included and their urine was used to detect phthalate metabolites. We used logistic and restricted cubic spline regressions to assess individual associations and dose-response relationships between phthalate metabolites and gallstones, quantile g-computation and Bayesian kernel machine regression to assess mixed associations of phthalate metabolites with gallstones, and subgroup analyses to explore potential effect modifiers. We observed that individual associations of cyclohexane-1,2-dicarboxylic acid-mono(carboxyoctyl) ester phthalate (MCOCHP) (OR: 1.423, 95% CI: 1.098-1.844) and cyclohexane 1,2-dicarboxylic acid monohydroxy isononyl ester (MHNCH) (OR: 1.380, 95% CI: 1.080-1.763) with gallstones were linearly positive, mixed association of phthalate metabolites (OR: 2.453, 95% CI: 1.054-5.708) with gallstones was also positive, and MCOCHP and MHNCH had positive weights. The associations of phthalate metabolites with gallstones were higher in the males and participants with age ≥ 60 years, BMI ≥ 30 kg/m2, hypertension, and diabetes. MCOCHP and MHNCH had the highest groupPIP (groupPIP: 0.941), mono(2-ethyl-5-carboxypentyl) terephthalate (MECPTP) had the highest condPIP (condPIP: 0.721), and mono(2-ethyl-5-carboxypentyl) phthalate (MECPP), MCOCHP, and mono-isobutyl phthalate (MiBP) also had high condPIPs (condPIP > 0.5). The trend in mixed associations of phthalate metabolites with gallstones was positive. Our study suggests that traditional phthalates and phthalate alternatives are associated with gallstones, especially in the elderly, men, obese, hypertensive populations, and diabetic populations, and phthalate alternatives are associated with a higher risk of gallstones.
期刊介绍:
Environmental Geochemistry and Health publishes original research papers and review papers across the broad field of environmental geochemistry. Environmental geochemistry and health establishes and explains links between the natural or disturbed chemical composition of the earth’s surface and the health of plants, animals and people.
Beneficial elements regulate or promote enzymatic and hormonal activity whereas other elements may be toxic. Bedrock geochemistry controls the composition of soil and hence that of water and vegetation. Environmental issues, such as pollution, arising from the extraction and use of mineral resources, are discussed. The effects of contaminants introduced into the earth’s geochemical systems are examined. Geochemical surveys of soil, water and plants show how major and trace elements are distributed geographically. Associated epidemiological studies reveal the possibility of causal links between the natural or disturbed geochemical environment and disease. Experimental research illuminates the nature or consequences of natural or disturbed geochemical processes.
The journal particularly welcomes novel research linking environmental geochemistry and health issues on such topics as: heavy metals (including mercury), persistent organic pollutants (POPs), and mixed chemicals emitted through human activities, such as uncontrolled recycling of electronic-waste; waste recycling; surface-atmospheric interaction processes (natural and anthropogenic emissions, vertical transport, deposition, and physical-chemical interaction) of gases and aerosols; phytoremediation/restoration of contaminated sites; food contamination and safety; environmental effects of medicines; effects and toxicity of mixed pollutants; speciation of heavy metals/metalloids; effects of mining; disturbed geochemistry from human behavior, natural or man-made hazards; particle and nanoparticle toxicology; risk and the vulnerability of populations, etc.