Department of Environmental Health Sciences, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, 722 West 168th Street, 1107, New York, NY, 10032, USA.
Centro Nacional de Epidemiología, Instituto de Salud Carlos III, Madrid, Spain.
Curr Environ Health Rep. 2023 Sep;10(3):215-249. doi: 10.1007/s40572-023-00402-x. Epub 2023 Jun 20.
Biomarkers are commonly used in epidemiological studies to assess metals and metalloid exposure and estimate internal dose, as they integrate multiple sources and routes of exposure. Researchers are increasingly using multi-metal panels and innovative statistical methods to understand how exposure to real-world metal mixtures affects human health. Metals have both common and unique sources and routes of exposure, as well as biotransformation and elimination pathways. The development of multi-element analytical technology allows researchers to examine a broad spectrum of metals in their studies; however, their interpretation is complex as they can reflect different windows of exposure and several biomarkers have critical limitations. This review elaborates on more than 500 scientific publications to discuss major sources of exposure, biotransformation and elimination, and biomarkers of exposure and internal dose for 12 metals/metalloids, including 8 non-essential elements (arsenic, barium, cadmium, lead, mercury, nickel, tin, uranium) and 4 essential elements (manganese, molybdenum, selenium, and zinc) commonly used in multi-element analyses.
We conclude that not all metal biomarkers are adequate measures of exposure and that understanding the metabolic biotransformation and elimination of metals is key to metal biomarker interpretation. For example, whole blood is a good biomarker of exposure to arsenic, cadmium, lead, mercury, and tin, but it is not a good indicator for barium, nickel, and uranium. For some essential metals, the interpretation of whole blood biomarkers is unclear. Urine is the most commonly used biomarker of exposure across metals but it should not be used to assess lead exposure. Essential metals such as zinc and manganese are tightly regulated by homeostatic processes; thus, elevated levels in urine may reflect body loss and metabolic processes rather than excess exposure. Total urinary arsenic may reflect exposure to both organic and inorganic arsenic, thus, arsenic speciation and adjustment for arsebonetaine are needed in populations with dietary seafood consumption. Hair and nails primarily reflect exposure to organic mercury, except in populations exposed to high levels of inorganic mercury such as in occupational and environmental settings. When selecting biomarkers, it is also critical to consider the exposure window of interest. Most populations are chronically exposed to metals in the low-to-moderate range, yet many biomarkers reflect recent exposures. Toenails are emerging biomarkers in this regard. They are reliable biomarkers of long-term exposure for arsenic, mercury, manganese, and selenium. However, more research is needed to understand the role of nails as a biomarker of exposure to other metals. Similarly, teeth are increasingly used to assess lifelong exposures to several essential and non-essential metals such as lead, including during the prenatal window. As metals epidemiology moves towards embracing a multi-metal/mixtures approach and expanding metal panels to include less commonly studied metals, it is important for researchers to have a strong knowledge base about the metal biomarkers included in their research. This review aims to aid metals researchers in their analysis planning, facilitate sound analytical decision-making, as well as appropriate understanding and interpretation of results.
生物标志物常用于评估金属和类金属暴露,并估计体内剂量,因为它们整合了多种暴露源和途径。研究人员越来越多地使用多金属组和创新的统计方法来了解暴露于现实世界的金属混合物如何影响人类健康。金属有共同和独特的暴露源和途径,以及生物转化和消除途径。多元素分析技术的发展使研究人员能够在研究中检测广泛的金属;然而,由于它们可以反映不同的暴露窗口,并且有几个生物标志物具有关键的局限性,因此它们的解释很复杂。本文综述了 500 多篇科学出版物,讨论了 12 种金属/类金属(包括 8 种非必需元素(砷、钡、镉、铅、汞、镍、锡、铀)和 4 种必需元素(锰、钼、硒和锌)的主要暴露源、生物转化和消除以及暴露和体内剂量的生物标志物。这些元素通常用于多元素分析。
我们得出的结论是,并非所有金属生物标志物都是暴露的充分衡量标准,了解金属的代谢生物转化和消除是金属生物标志物解释的关键。例如,全血是砷、镉、铅、汞和锡暴露的良好生物标志物,但它不是钡、镍和铀的良好指标。对于一些必需金属,全血生物标志物的解释尚不清楚。尿液是各种金属暴露最常用的生物标志物,但不应用于评估铅暴露。锌和锰等必需金属受体内平衡过程的严格调节;因此,尿液中水平升高可能反映了身体损失和代谢过程,而不是过量暴露。总尿砷可能反映了有机砷和无机砷的暴露,因此,在有饮食海鲜消费的人群中需要进行砷形态分析和砷甜菜碱调整。头发和指甲主要反映有机汞的暴露,除非在接触高水平无机汞的人群中,如职业和环境环境中。在选择生物标志物时,还必须考虑感兴趣的暴露窗口。大多数人群处于低至中度范围内的慢性金属暴露,但许多生物标志物反映了最近的暴露。脚趾甲是这方面的新兴生物标志物。它们是砷、汞、锰和硒长期暴露的可靠生物标志物。然而,需要更多的研究来了解指甲作为其他金属暴露生物标志物的作用。同样,牙齿越来越多地用于评估几种必需和非必需金属(如铅)的终生暴露,包括在产前窗口。随着金属流行病学朝着多金属/混合物方法的方向发展,并扩大金属组以包括研究较少的金属,研究人员对其研究中包含的金属生物标志物有一个坚实的知识库非常重要。本综述旨在帮助金属研究人员进行分析规划,促进合理的分析决策,以及对结果的适当理解和解释。