Geographic and dietary differences of urinary uranium levels in the Strong Heart Family Study.

IF 4.1 3区 医学 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
Kevin P Patterson, Anne E Nigra, Pablo Olmedo, Maria Grau-Perez, Rae O'Leary, Marcia O'Leary, Amanda M Fretts, Jason G Umans, Lyle G Best, Walter Goessler, Shelley A Cole, Ana Navas-Acien
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: American Indian (AI) communities are affected by uranium exposure from abandoned mines and naturally contaminated drinking water. Few studies have evaluated geographical differences across AI communities and the role of dietary exposures.

Objective: We evaluated differences in urinary uranium levels by diet and geographical area among AI participants from the Northern Plains, the Southern Plains, and the Southwest enrolled in the Strong Heart Family Study (SHFS).

Methods: We used food frequency questionnaires to determine dietary sources related to urinary uranium levels for 1,682 SHFS participants in 2001-2003. We calculated adjusted geometric mean ratios (GMRs) of urinary uranium for an interquartile range (IQR) increase in self-reported food group consumption accounting for family clustering and adjusting for sociodemographic variables and other food groups. We determined the percentage of variability in urinary uranium explained by diet.

Results: Median (IQR) urinary uranium levels were 0.027 (0.012, 0.057) μg/g creatinine. Urinary uranium levels were higher in Arizona (median 0.039 μg/g) and North Dakota and South Dakota (median 0.038 μg/g) and lower in Oklahoma (median 0.019 μg/g). The adjusted percent increase (95% confidence interval) of urinary uranium levels per IQR increase in reported food intake was 20% (5%, 36%) for organ meat, 11% (1%, 23%) for cereals, and 14% (1%, 29%) for alcoholic drinks. In analyses stratified by study center, the association with organ meat was specific to North Dakota and South Dakota participants. An IQR increase in consumption of fries and chips was inversely associated with urinary uranium levels -11% (-19%, -3%). Overall, we estimated that self-reported dietary exposures explained 1.71% of variability in urine uranium levels.

Impact: Our paper provides a novel assessment of self-reported food intake and urinary uranium levels in a cohort of American Indian participants. We identify foods (organ meat, cereals, and alcohol) positively associated with urinary uranium levels, find that organ meat consumption is only associated with urine uranium in North Dakota and South Dakota, and estimate that diet explains relatively little variation in total urinary uranium concentrations. Our findings contribute meaningful data toward a more comprehensive estimation of uranium exposure among Native American communities and support the need for high-quality assessments of water and dust uranium exposures in SHFS communities.

Abstract Image

强心家庭研究》中尿铀水平的地域和饮食差异。
背景:美国印第安人(AI)社区受到废弃矿井和自然污染饮用水中铀暴露的影响。很少有研究对美国印第安人社区的地域差异以及饮食暴露的作用进行评估:我们评估了参加强心家庭研究(SHFS)的北部平原、南部平原和西南部印第安人饮食和地理区域在尿铀水平上的差异:我们使用食物频率问卷调查来确定与 2001-2003 年 1682 名强心脏家庭研究参与者尿铀水平相关的饮食来源。我们计算了调整后的尿铀几何平均比 (GMRs),即自我报告的食物组消耗量在四分位数区间 (IQR) 增加时的尿铀几何平均比 (GMRs),其中考虑到了家庭聚类,并对社会人口学变量和其他食物组进行了调整。我们确定了由饮食解释的尿铀变异的百分比:结果:尿铀水平的中位数(IQR)为 0.027(0.012,0.057)微克/克肌酐。亚利桑那州(中位数为 0.039 微克/克)、北达科他州和南达科他州(中位数为 0.038 微克/克)的尿铀水平较高,俄克拉荷马州(中位数为 0.019 微克/克)的尿铀水平较低。报告的食物摄入量每增加 IQR,调整后的尿铀水平增加百分比(95% 置信区间)为:内脏肉类 20% (5%, 36%),谷物 11% (1%, 23%),酒精饮料 14% (1%, 29%)。在按研究中心进行的分层分析中,北达科他州和南达科他州的参与者与内脏肉类的关系比较特殊。薯条和薯片消费量的 IQR 增加与尿铀水平成反比-11%(-19%,-3%)。总体而言,我们估计自我报告的饮食暴露解释了尿铀水平变化的 1.71%:我们的论文对美国印第安人群组中自我报告的食物摄入量和尿铀水平进行了新颖的评估。我们确定了与尿铀水平正相关的食物(内脏肉、谷物和酒精),发现内脏肉的摄入仅与北达科他州和南达科他州的尿铀有关,并估计饮食对尿铀总浓度的变化解释相对较少。我们的研究结果为更全面地估计美国原住民社区的铀暴露提供了有意义的数据,并支持了对 SHFS 社区的水和灰尘铀暴露进行高质量评估的必要性。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
8.90
自引率
6.70%
发文量
93
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Journal of Exposure Science and Environmental Epidemiology (JESEE) aims to be the premier and authoritative source of information on advances in exposure science for professionals in a wide range of environmental and public health disciplines. JESEE publishes original peer-reviewed research presenting significant advances in exposure science and exposure analysis, including development and application of the latest technologies for measuring exposures, and innovative computational approaches for translating novel data streams to characterize and predict exposures. The types of papers published in the research section of JESEE are original research articles, translation studies, and correspondence. Reported results should further understanding of the relationship between environmental exposure and human health, describe evaluated novel exposure science tools, or demonstrate potential of exposure science to enable decisions and actions that promote and protect human health.
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