Lee Duk-Hee, Porta Miquel, Jacobs David R, Vandenberg Laura N
Department of Preventive Medicine (D.-H.L.), School of Medicine, Kyungpook National University, Daegu 700-422, Korea; BK21 Plus KNU Biomedical Convergence Program, Department of Biomedical Science (D.-H.L.), Kyungpook National University, Korea; Hospital del Mar Institute of Medical Research (M.P.), School of Medicine, Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona, and Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red de Epidemiología y Salud Pública, Barcelona 08193, Spain; Division of Epidemiology (D.R.J.), School of Public Health, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455; Department of Nutrition (D.R.J.), University of Oslo, 0313 Oslo, Norway; and University of Massachusetts-Amherst (L.N.V.), School of Public Health, Division of Environmental Health Sciences, Amherst, Massachusetts 01003.
Endocr Rev. 2014 Aug;35(4):557-601. doi: 10.1210/er.2013-1084. Epub 2014 Jan 31.
Persistent organic pollutants (POPs) are lipophilic compounds that travel with lipids and accumulate mainly in adipose tissue. Recent human evidence links low-dose POPs to an increased risk of type 2 diabetes (T2D). Because humans are contaminated by POP mixtures and POPs possibly have nonmonotonic dose-response relations with T2D, critical methodological issues arise in evaluating human findings. This review summarizes epidemiological results on chlorinated POPs and T2D, and relevant experimental evidence. It also discusses how features of POPs can affect inferences in humans. The evidence as a whole suggests that, rather than a few individual POPs, background exposure to POP mixtures-including organochlorine pesticides and polychlorinated biphenyls-can increase T2D risk in humans. Inconsistent statistical significance for individual POPs may arise due to distributional differences in POP mixtures among populations. Differences in the observed shape of the dose-response curves among human studies may reflect an inverted U-shaped association secondary to mitochondrial dysfunction or endocrine disruption. Finally, we examine the relationship between POPs and obesity. There is evidence in animal studies that low-dose POP mixtures are obesogenic. However, relationships between POPs and obesity in humans have been inconsistent. Adipose tissue plays a dual role of promoting T2D and providing a relatively safe place to store POPs. Large prospective studies with serial measurements of a broad range of POPs, adiposity, and clinically relevant biomarkers are needed to disentangle the interrelationships among POPs, obesity, and the development of T2D. Also needed are laboratory experiments that more closely mimic real-world POP doses, mixtures, and exposure duration in humans.
持久性有机污染物(POPs)是亲脂性化合物,可随脂质移动并主要蓄积于脂肪组织中。近期的人体研究证据表明,低剂量的持久性有机污染物会增加患2型糖尿病(T2D)的风险。由于人类受到持久性有机污染物混合物的污染,且持久性有机污染物与2型糖尿病之间可能存在非单调剂量反应关系,因此在评估人体研究结果时出现了关键的方法学问题。本综述总结了关于氯化持久性有机污染物与2型糖尿病的流行病学结果以及相关实验证据。它还讨论了持久性有机污染物的特性如何影响对人体的推断。总体证据表明,背景暴露于包括有机氯农药和多氯联苯在内的持久性有机污染物混合物会增加人类患2型糖尿病的风险,而不是少数几种单一的持久性有机污染物。个体持久性有机污染物的统计显著性不一致可能是由于人群中持久性有机污染物混合物的分布差异所致。人体研究中观察到的剂量反应曲线形状差异可能反映了继发于线粒体功能障碍或内分泌干扰的倒U形关联。最后,我们研究了持久性有机污染物与肥胖之间的关系。动物研究中有证据表明,低剂量的持久性有机污染物混合物具有致肥胖性。然而,持久性有机污染物与人类肥胖之间的关系并不一致。脂肪组织在促进2型糖尿病发展和提供一个相对安全的储存持久性有机污染物的场所方面发挥着双重作用。需要进行大规模前瞻性研究,对广泛的持久性有机污染物、肥胖程度和临床相关生物标志物进行连续测量,以厘清持久性有机污染物、肥胖与2型糖尿病发展之间的相互关系。还需要进行实验室实验,更密切地模拟人类实际接触的持久性有机污染物剂量、混合物和接触持续时间。