Hagobian Todd, Delli-Bovi Zoe, Mercado Adrian, Bird Alyssa, Guy Megan, Phelan Suzanne
Center for Health Research and Department of Kinesiology and Public Health, California Polytechnic State University, 1 Grand Avenue, San Luis Obispo, CA, 93407, USA.
Pilot Feasibility Stud. 2021 Jan 12;7(1):24. doi: 10.1186/s40814-020-00744-5.
Bisphenol exposure is widespread and correlated with diabetes and cardiovascular disease. Previous intervention studies have successfully lowered bisphenol exposure among women of normal weight. The primary objective of this study was to develop and test the feasibility of a 3-week behavioral change intervention, rooted in social cognitive theory, to lower a broad range of bisphenols (BPA, BPS, and BPF) in women with obesity.
Thirty women with obesity (31.1 ± 5.6 kg/m, 21.1 ± 3.1 years) were randomly assigned to an intervention or control. The intervention included weekly face-to-face meetings to reduce bisphenol exposures from food, cosmetics, and packaged products. Fasting urinary bisphenols, creatinine, and weight were assessed at study entry and after 3 weeks.
The intervention was evaluated as feasible (100% of enrollment and recruitment, 96% of retention and attendance at lesson plan visits, and 96% of a collection of urine samples). Adherence to the intervention was estimated based on completion of self-monitoring records; the number of daily records completed was 7.7 ± 1.3 (mean ± SD) after week 1, 7.1 ± 1.5 after week 2, and 4.4 ± 0.9 after week 3. In secondary analysis, there was a significant treatment × time effect on creatinine-corrected urinary BPS (- 1.42 μg/g creatinine in the intervention vs. - 0.09 μg/g creatinine in the control group).
In women with obesity, the 3-week intervention was considered feasible with promising preliminary results of decreasing BPS concentrations. These data warrant future large-scale clinical trial interventions to reduce bisphenol exposure and determine whether reductions in bisphenols positively impact diabetes and cardiovascular disease risk markers. This study was retroactively registered at ClinicalTrial.gov Identifier NCT03440307.
双酚暴露广泛存在,且与糖尿病和心血管疾病相关。以往的干预研究已成功降低了体重正常女性的双酚暴露水平。本研究的主要目的是开发并测试一种基于社会认知理论的为期3周的行为改变干预措施,以降低肥胖女性体内多种双酚(双酚A、双酚S和双酚F)的水平。
30名肥胖女性(体重指数31.1±5.6kg/m²,年龄21.1±3.1岁)被随机分为干预组或对照组。干预措施包括每周进行面对面交流,以减少食物、化妆品和包装产品中的双酚暴露。在研究开始时和3周后评估空腹尿双酚、肌酐和体重。
该干预措施被评估为可行(入组和招募率为100%,保留率和按课程计划访视的出勤率为96%,尿样采集率为96%)。根据自我监测记录的完成情况估算干预措施的依从性;第1周后每天完成的记录数量为7.7±1.3(均值±标准差),第2周后为7.1±1.5,第3周后为4.4±0.9。在二次分析中,校正肌酐后的尿双酚S存在显著的治疗×时间效应(干预组为-1.42μg/g肌酐,对照组为-0.09μg/g肌酐)。
对于肥胖女性,为期3周的干预措施被认为可行,且在降低双酚S浓度方面有初步的良好结果。这些数据为未来开展大规模临床试验干预以减少双酚暴露并确定双酚水平降低是否对糖尿病和心血管疾病风险标志物产生积极影响提供了依据。本研究已在ClinicalTrial.gov上进行追溯注册,标识符为NCT03440307。