Seasonal patterns in trace elements assessed in toenails

Q2 Environmental Science
Kaitlyn M. Wojcik , Ann Von Holle , Katie M. O'Brien , Alexandra J. White , Margaret R. Karagas , Keith E. Levine , Brian P. Jackson , Clarice R. Weinberg
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background

Seasonal patterns in measured exposure biomarkers can cause measurement error in epidemiological studies. There is little research about the seasonality of metals and trace elements when assessed in toenail samples. Adjusting for such patterns in models for estimating associations between long-term exposures and health outcomes can potentially improve precision and reduce bias.

Objectives

Assess and describe seasonal patterns in toenail measurements of trace elements.

Methods

The Sister Study enrolled women residing in the US, including Puerto Rico, whose sister had been diagnosed with breast cancer. At the time of enrollment, participants removed nail polish and collected their toenail clippings, which were cleaned before analysis. We considered the following elements: iron, vanadium, aluminum, chromium, manganese, cobalt, nickel, copper, zinc, arsenic, selenium, molybdenum, cadmium, tin, antimony, mercury, and lead. For two subsamples of the cohort, we fit trigonometric regression models with toenail element measures as the outcome, using sine and cosine functions of the collection day (transformed to an angle) to capture seasonal patterns. These models can estimate the amplitude and timing of the peaks in measures. We evaluated the evidence for a seasonal effect by comparing for each measured element the trigonometric model to a model that was constant across time.

Results

There was a seasonal trend in toenail element concentration for iron, aluminum, vanadium, chromium, manganese, cobalt, arsenic, molybdenum, cadmium, tin, and lead, all of which peaked near mid-August. Seasonal patterns were concordant across two non-overlapping samples of women, analyzed in different labs.

Discussion

Given the evidence supporting seasonal patterns for 11 of the 17 elements measured in toenails, correcting for seasonality of toenail levels of those trace elements in models estimating the association between those exposures and health outcomes is important. The basis for higher concentrations in toenails collected during the summer remains unknown.

脚趾甲中微量元素评估的季节性模式
背景在流行病学研究中,测量暴露生物标志物的季节性模式会导致测量误差。有关在脚趾甲样本中评估金属和微量元素季节性的研究很少。在估算长期暴露与健康结果之间关联的模型中对这种模式进行调整可能会提高精确度并减少偏差。方法姐妹研究招募了居住在美国(包括波多黎各)、其姐妹被诊断出患有乳腺癌的女性。在登记时,参与者卸下指甲油并收集脚趾甲剪片,在分析前对剪片进行清洗。我们考虑了以下元素:铁、钒、铝、铬、锰、钴、镍、铜、锌、砷、硒、钼、镉、锡、锑、汞和铅。对于队列中的两个子样本,我们使用采集日的正弦和余弦函数(转换为角度)拟合了以脚趾甲元素测量为结果的三角回归模型,以捕捉季节性模式。这些模型可以估算出测量值峰值的幅度和时间。结果脚趾甲中铁、铝、钒、铬、锰、钴、砷、钼、镉、锡和铅的元素浓度呈季节性趋势,所有这些元素的浓度在八月中旬达到峰值。讨论鉴于有证据支持脚趾甲中测得的 17 种元素中的 11 种元素具有季节性,因此在估算这些微量元素暴露与健康结果之间关系的模型中,校正脚趾甲中这些微量元素水平的季节性非常重要。夏季采集的脚趾甲中微量元素浓度较高的原因尚不清楚。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Environmental Advances
Environmental Advances Environmental Science-Environmental Science (miscellaneous)
CiteScore
7.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
165
审稿时长
12 weeks
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