An exposome atlas of serum reveals the risk of chronic diseases in the Chinese population

Lei You(Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics), Jing Kou(Ministry of Ecology and Environment), Mengdie Wang(Shenyang Medical College), Guoqin Ji(Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics), Xiang Li(Ministry of Ecology and Environment), Chang Su(Chinese Center For Disease Control and Prevention), Fujian Zheng(Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics), Mingye Zhang(Ministry of Ecology and Environment), Yuting Wang(Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics), Tiantian Chen(Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics), Ting Li(Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics), Lina Zhou(Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics), Xianzhe Shi(Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics), Chunxia Zhao(Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics), Xinyu Liu(Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics), Surong Mei(Huazhong University of Science and Technology), Guowang Xu(Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics)
Nature Communications
March 13, 2024
Cited by 92Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Although adverse environmental exposures are considered a major cause of chronic diseases, current studies provide limited information on real-world chemical exposures and related risks. For this study, we collected serum samples from 5696 healthy people and patients, including those with 12 chronic diseases, in China and completed serum biomonitoring including 267 chemicals via gas and liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. Seventy-four highly frequently detected exposures were used for exposure characterization and risk analysis. The results show that region is the most critical factor influencing human exposure levels, followed by age. Organochlorine pesticides and perfluoroalkyl substances are associated with multiple chronic diseases, and some of them exceed safe ranges. Multi-exposure models reveal significant risk effects of exposure on hyperlipidemia, metabolic syndrome and hyperuricemia. Overall, this study provides a comprehensive human serum exposome atlas and disease risk information, which can guide subsequent in-depth cause-and-effect studies between environmental exposures and human health.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis