Seafood Toxicant Exposure During Pregnancy, Lactation, and Childhood and Child Outcomes: A Scoping Review

IF 8 1区 医学 Q1 NUTRITION & DIETETICS
Rupal Trivedi , Maureen K Spill , Sanjoy Saha , Rachel C Thoerig , Julie S Davis , Amanda J MacFarlane
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Determining dietary recommendations for seafood consumed during pregnancy, lactation, and childhood requires consideration of the known nutritional benefits and potential harm due to toxicant exposure as they relate to child outcomes. This study aimed to describe the scope of the evidence associated with seafood-related toxicant exposure and child outcomes and to identify toxicant–outcome pairs that may have sufficient evidence to conduct a systematic review. We included studies examining seafood toxicant exposure during pregnancy, lactation, and childhood, and child outcomes. In total, 81 studies were included: 69 studies on exposure during pregnancy and lactation and 14 on exposure during childhood. The number of studies varied by toxicant and exposure population (maternal; child): mercury (n = 49; 7), methylmercury (n = 13; 3), polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs; n = 11; 1), selenium (n = 11; 1), lead (n = 9; 3), perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances (n = 8; 2), dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (n = 5; 1), arsenic (n = 4; 4), cadmium (n = 4; 4), zinc (n = 3; 2), polybrominated diphenyl ethers (n = 3; 1), dioxin-like compounds (n = 3; 0), iron (n = 2; 1), and magnesium (n = 1; 1). No studies examined polybrominated biphenyls, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, iodine, aldrin, dieldrin, chlordane, chlorpyrifos, or microplastic exposures. Outcomes also varied by exposure population (maternal;child): neurodevelopment (n = 35; 9), child exposure biomarkers (n = 22; 4), growth (n = 17; 1), other adverse events (n = 4; 0), cardiometabolic (n = 3; 2), chronic disease indicators (n = 2; 0), and immune-related (n = 1; 2). Twelve maternal toxicant–outcome pairs had ≥3 studies, including mercury, methylmercury, lead, PCBs, perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances, and arsenic as exposures and neurodevelopment, child exposure biomarkers, growth, and cardiometabolic as outcomes. For child exposure, only mercury and neurodevelopment had ≥3 studies. In conclusion, this scoping review shows relevant evidence for 14 of the 22 toxicants. Only 12 maternal and 1 child toxicant–outcome pairs, the majority of which examined maternal (methyl)mercury exposure, had ≥3 studies, our cutoff for consideration for systematic review. This scoping review indicates a paucity of research examining seafood toxicants beyond mercury and exposure during childhood. Systematic reviews are required to evaluate the associations for each toxicant–outcome pairs.
The protocol was registered at Open Science Framework (https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/FQZTA).
妊娠期、哺乳期和儿童期的海产品毒物暴露:范围综述。
背景:确定孕期、哺乳期和儿童期食用海鲜的膳食建议,需要考虑已知的营养益处和有毒物质暴露对儿童结局的潜在危害。目的:描述与海鲜相关毒物暴露和儿童结果相关的证据范围,并确定可能有足够证据进行系统审查的毒物-结果对。方法:我们纳入了有关怀孕、哺乳期和儿童期海鲜毒物暴露和儿童结局的研究。结果:纳入81项研究;70项关于孕期和哺乳期暴露的研究14项关于儿童期暴露的研究。研究的数量因毒物和接触人群(母亲;儿童)而异:汞(n=49;7)、甲基汞(n=14;2)、多氯联苯(PCBs;n=11;1)、硒(n=11;1)、铅(n=9;3)、全氟烷基和多氟烷基物质(PFAS/PFCs;N =8;2)、二氯二苯三氯乙烷(N =5;1)、砷(N =4;4)、镉(N =4;4)、锌(N =3;2)、多溴二苯醚(N =3;1)、类二恶英化合物(N =3;0)、铁(N =2;1)和镁(N =1;1)。没有研究检查多溴联苯、多环芳烃、碘、艾氏剂、狄氏剂、氯丹、毒死蜱或微塑料暴露。结果也因暴露人群(母亲;儿童)而异:神经发育(n=35;9)、儿童暴露生物标志物(n=23;4)、生长(n=17;1)、其他不良事件(n=4;0)、心脏代谢(n=3;2)、慢性疾病指标(n=2;0)和免疫相关(n=1;2)。12个母体毒物结局对有≥3个研究,包括汞、甲基汞、铅、多氯联苯、PFAS/PFCs和砷作为暴露,以及神经发育、儿童暴露生物标志物、生长和心脏代谢作为结果。对于儿童暴露,只有汞和神经发育有≥3项研究。结论:本次范围审查确定了22种毒物中14种的相关证据。只有12个母体和1个儿童毒性结局对,其中大多数检查母体(甲基)汞暴露,有≥3个研究,我们的截止值用于系统评价。这一范围审查表明,对汞以外的海产品毒物和儿童接触的研究很少。需要进行系统评价,以评估每个毒物-结果对之间的关联。注册和注册编号:该方案已在开放科学框架(https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/FQZTA).Statement)中注册,具有重要意义:对于妊娠或哺乳期暴露,12个毒性结局对有≥3个研究;然而,对于儿童时期海鲜毒物暴露,只有1个毒物结局对有≥3项研究。数量有限的毒物结局对有足够的证据进行系统评价。
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
Advances in Nutrition
Advances in Nutrition 医学-营养学
CiteScore
17.40
自引率
2.20%
发文量
117
审稿时长
56 days
期刊介绍: Advances in Nutrition (AN/Adv Nutr) publishes focused reviews on pivotal findings and recent research across all domains relevant to nutritional scientists and biomedical researchers. This encompasses nutrition-related research spanning biochemical, molecular, and genetic studies using experimental animal models, domestic animals, and human subjects. The journal also emphasizes clinical nutrition, epidemiology and public health, and nutrition education. Review articles concentrate on recent progress rather than broad historical developments. In addition to review articles, AN includes Perspectives, Letters to the Editor, and supplements. Supplement proposals require pre-approval by the editor before submission. The journal features reports and position papers from the American Society for Nutrition, summaries of major government and foundation reports, and Nutrient Information briefs providing crucial details about dietary requirements, food sources, deficiencies, and other essential nutrient information. All submissions with scientific content undergo peer review by the Editors or their designees prior to acceptance for publication.
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