Internal Medicine, Samsung Changwon Hospital, Changwon, Gyeonsangnam-do, The Republic of Korea.
Biostatistics, Samsung Changwon Hospital, Changwon, Gyeonsangnam-do, The Republic of Korea.
BMJ Open. 2021 Mar 4;11(3):e039541. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-039541.
To investigate the associations between heavy metal exposure and serum ferritin levels, physical measurements and type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM).
A retrospective cohort study.
Changwon, the location of this study, is a Korean representative industrial city. Data were obtained from medical check-ups between 2002 and 2018.
A total of 34 814 male subjects were included. Of them, 1035 subjects with lead exposure, 200 subjects with cadmium exposure and the 33 579 remaining were assigned to cohort A, cohort B and the control cohort, respectively. Data including personal history of alcohol and smoking, age, height, weight, the follow-up duration, haemoglobin A1c (HbA1c), fasting blood sugar (FBS), ferritin levels, and lead and cadmium levels within 1 year after exposure were collected.
In subjects without diabetes, changes in FBS and HbA1c were analysed through repeated tests at intervals of 1 year or longer after the occupational exposure to heavy metals.
In Cohort A, DM was diagnosed in 33 subjects. There was a significant difference in lead concentrations between the subjects diagnosed with DM and those without DM during the follow-up period (3.94±2.92 mg/dL vs 2.81±2.03 mg/dL, p=0.002). Simple exposure to heavy metals (lead and cadmium) was not associated with DM in Cox regression models (lead exposure (HR) 1.01, 95% CI: 0.58 to 1.77, p 0.971; cadmium exposure HR 1.48, 95% CI: 0.61 to 3.55, p=0.385). Annual changes in FBS according to lead concentration at the beginning of exposure showed a positive correlation (r=0.072, p=0.032).
Our findings demonstrated that simple occupational exposure to heavy metals lead and cadmium was not associated with the incidence of DM. However, lead concentrations at the beginning of the exposure might be an indicator of DM and glucose elevations.
研究重金属暴露与血清铁蛋白水平、体格测量值和 2 型糖尿病(DM)之间的关联。
回顾性队列研究。
这项研究的地点位于韩国昌原市,是韩国具有代表性的工业城市。数据来自 2002 年至 2018 年的体检。
共纳入 34814 名男性受试者。其中,1035 名有铅暴露,200 名有镉暴露,其余 33579 名受试者分别被分配到队列 A、队列 B 和对照组。收集的数据包括个人饮酒和吸烟史、年龄、身高、体重、随访时间、糖化血红蛋白(HbA1c)、空腹血糖(FBS)、铁蛋白水平以及暴露后 1 年内的铅和镉水平。
在无糖尿病的受试者中,通过间隔 1 年或更长时间的重复测试,分析重金属职业暴露后 FBS 和 HbA1c 的变化。
在队列 A 中,33 例被诊断为 DM。在随访期间,患有 DM 和未患 DM 的受试者的血铅浓度存在显著差异(3.94±2.92mg/dL 比 2.81±2.03mg/dL,p=0.002)。简单的重金属(铅和镉)暴露与 Cox 回归模型中的 DM 无关(铅暴露 HR 1.01,95%CI:0.58 至 1.77,p=0.971;镉暴露 HR 1.48,95%CI:0.61 至 3.55,p=0.385)。根据暴露开始时的血铅浓度,FBS 的年变化呈正相关(r=0.072,p=0.032)。
我们的研究结果表明,单纯的职业重金属铅和镉暴露与 DM 的发生无关。然而,暴露开始时的铅浓度可能是 DM 和血糖升高的一个指标。