Zhou Jixing, Tong Juan, Liang Chunmei, Chen Shidie, Sheng Jie, Gao Guopeng, Cao Hui, Yan Shuangqin, Tao Fangbiao, Huang Kun
Department of Maternal, Child and Adolescent Health, School of Public Health, Anhui Medical University, China; Key Laboratory of Population Health Across Life Cycle (AHMU), MOE, Hefei 230032, China; NHC Key Laboratory of Study on Abnormal Gametes and Reproductive Tract, Hefei 230032, China; Anhui Provincial Key Laboratory of Environment and Population Health Across the Life Course, Hefei 230032, China.
School of Public Health, Department of Hygiene Inspection and Quarantine, Anhui Medical University, Hefei, Anhui 230032, China.
J Hazard Mater. 2025 Sep 15;496:139312. doi: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2025.139312. Epub 2025 Jul 18.
Metals can partly accumulate in the placenta and disrupt placental function, thereby affecting fetal programming. Prenatal metal exposure may be associated with long-term lipid health in offspring, but this association has not been studied in birth cohorts. In the Ma'anshan birth Cohort (MABC), placental tissue concentrations of fourteen metals were quantified. We assessed the lipid profile of children aged 5-6 years and identified children with dyslipidemia. Placental thallium (Tl) (OR = 1.555; 95 % CI: 1.150-2.103), vanadium (V) (OR = 1.465; 95 % CI: 1.131-1.898), and molybdenum (Mo) (OR = 1.446; 95 % CI: 1.038-2.014) are associated with increased risk of dyslipidemia in children. Both bayesian kernel machine regression (BKMR) and weighted quantile sum (WQS) models suggested that placental metal mixture were positively associated with increased risk of dyslipidemia. The results of both WQS and quantile g-computation (Qgcomp) analyses revealed that Mo, V, and Tl were the three key metals predominantly responsible for the heightened risk of dyslipidemia. In the interaction analysis, no significant moderating effect on dyslipidemia was found between maternal average vitamin D levels during pregnancy and single or mixed placental metals. However, the association between placental V and dyslipidemia was more pronounced in maternal average vitamin D deficiency group, while placental Mo was associated with dyslipidemia only in maternal average vitamin D non-deficiency group. Moreover, the association of placental Tl, V, Mo, Zn, Cu with dyslipidemia was particularly prominent in mother-child pairs with metabolic disorders during pregnancy. In summary, placental exposure to Tl, V and Mo may increase the risk of dyslipidemia in offspring, no significant evidence of a modifying effect by average vitamin D levels. While exploratory trimester-specific analyses suggest potential complexity, these findings require confirmation in future studies to avoid conflicting conclusions.
金属可部分在胎盘中蓄积并破坏胎盘功能,从而影响胎儿发育。产前金属暴露可能与后代的长期脂质健康有关,但这一关联尚未在出生队列中进行研究。在马鞍山出生队列(MABC)中,对14种金属的胎盘组织浓度进行了量化。我们评估了5至6岁儿童的血脂谱,并确定了血脂异常的儿童。胎盘铊(Tl)(比值比[OR]=1.555;95%置信区间[CI]:1.150至2.103)、钒(V)(OR=1.465;95%CI:1.131至1.898)和钼(Mo)(OR=1.446;95%CI:1.038至2.014)与儿童血脂异常风险增加有关。贝叶斯核机器回归(BKMR)模型和加权分位数和(WQS)模型均表明,胎盘金属混合物与血脂异常风险增加呈正相关。WQS分析和分位数g计算(Qgcomp)分析结果均显示,Mo、V和Tl是导致血脂异常风险升高的三种主要关键金属。在交互分析中,未发现孕期母亲平均维生素D水平与单一或混合胎盘金属之间对血脂异常有显著的调节作用。然而,胎盘V与血脂异常之间的关联在母亲平均维生素D缺乏组中更为明显,而胎盘Mo仅在母亲平均维生素D非缺乏组中与血脂异常有关。此外,胎盘Tl、V、Mo、锌(Zn)、铜(Cu)与血脂异常之间的关联在孕期患有代谢紊乱的母婴对中尤为突出。总之,胎盘暴露于Tl、V和Mo可能会增加后代血脂异常的风险,没有明显证据表明平均维生素D水平有调节作用。虽然探索性的按孕期阶段分析表明存在潜在复杂性,但这些发现需要在未来研究中得到证实,以避免得出相互矛盾的结论。