Plastics, Minderoo Foundation, 171-173 Mounts Bay Road 6000, Perth, WA, Australia; School of Biological Sciences, The University of Western Australia, 35 Stirling Highway, Crawley, WA 6009, Australia.
Plastics, Minderoo Foundation, 171-173 Mounts Bay Road 6000, Perth, WA, Australia; School of Molecular Sciences, The University of Western Australia, 35 Stirling Highway, Crawley, WA 6009, Australia.
Environ Int. 2023 Nov;181:108225. doi: 10.1016/j.envint.2023.108225. Epub 2023 Oct 10.
The global production and use of plastic materials has increased dramatically since the 1960s and there is increasing evidence of human health impacts related to exposure to plastic-associated chemicals. There is, however, no comprehensive, regulatory, post-market monitoring for human health effects of plastic-associated chemicals or particles and it is unclear how many of these have been investigated for effects in humans, and therefore what the knowledge gaps are.
To create a systematic evidence map of peer-reviewed human studies investigating the potential effects of exposure to plastic-associated particles/chemicals on health to identify research gaps and provide recommendations for future research and regulation policy.
Medline and Embase databases were used to identify peer-reviewed primary human studies published in English from Jan 1960 - Jan 2022 that investigated relationships between exposures to included plastic-associated particles/chemicals measured and detected in bio-samples and human health outcomes. Plastic-associated particles/chemicals included are: micro and nanoplastics, due to their widespread occurrence and potential for human exposure; polymers, the main building blocks of plastic; plasticizers and flame retardants, the two most common types of plastic additives with the highest concentration ranges in plastic materials; and bisphenols and per- or polyfluoroalkyl substances, two chemical classes of known health concern that are common in plastics. We extracted metadata on the population and study characteristics (country, intergenerational, sex, age, general/special exposure risk status, study design), exposure (plastic-associated particle/chemical, multiple exposures), and health outcome measures (biochemical, physiological, and/or clinical), from which we produced the interactive database 'Plastic Health Map' and a narrative summary.
We identified 100,949 unique articles, of which 3,587 met our inclusion criteria and were used to create a systematic evidence map. The Plastic Health Map with extracted metadata from included studies are freely available at https://osf.io/fhw7d/ and summary tables, plots and overall observations are included in this report.
We present the first evidence map compiling human health research on a wide range of plastic-associated chemicals from several different chemical classes, in order to provide stakeholders, including researchers, regulators, and concerned individuals, with an efficient way to access published literature on the matter and determine knowledge gaps. We also provide examples of data clusters to facilitate systematic reviews and research gaps to help direct future research efforts. Extensive gaps are identified in the breadth of populations, exposures and outcomes addressed in studies of potential human health effects of plastic-associated chemicals. No studies of the human health effects of micro and/or nanoplastics were found, and no studies were found for 26/1,202 additives included in our search that are of known hazard concern and confirmed to be in active production. Few studies have addressed recent "substitution" chemicals for restricted additives such as organophosphate flame retardants, phthalate substitutes, and bisphenol analogues. We call for a paradigm shift in chemical regulation whereby new plastic chemicals are rigorously tested for safety before being introduced in consumer products, with ongoing post-introduction biomonitoring of their levels in humans and health effects throughout individuals' life span, including in old age and across generations.
自 20 世纪 60 年代以来,全球塑料材料的生产和使用急剧增加,越来越多的证据表明人类健康受到与接触塑料相关化学品有关的影响。然而,目前还没有针对塑料相关化学物质或颗粒对人类健康影响的全面、监管性的上市后监测,也不清楚有多少这些物质已经被研究过对人类的影响,因此存在哪些知识空白。
创建一个系统的同行评审人类研究证据图谱,调查接触塑料相关颗粒/化学物质对健康的潜在影响,以确定研究空白,并为未来的研究和监管政策提供建议。
使用 Medline 和 Embase 数据库,从 1960 年 1 月至 2022 年 1 月,检索了发表在英文期刊上的评估塑料相关颗粒/化学物质暴露与生物样本和人类健康结果之间关系的同行评审原始人类研究。塑料相关颗粒/化学物质包括:由于其广泛存在和潜在的人类暴露,微塑料和纳米塑料;聚合物,塑料的主要组成部分;增塑剂和阻燃剂,这两种最常见的塑料添加剂,在塑料材料中的浓度范围最高;双酚和全氟或多氟烷基物质,这两种已知对健康有影响的化学物质类别,在塑料中很常见。我们从研究中提取了关于人群和研究特征(国家、代际、性别、年龄、一般/特殊暴露风险状况、研究设计)、暴露(塑料相关颗粒/化学物质、多种暴露)和健康结果测量(生化、生理和/或临床)的元数据,并据此制作了互动数据库“塑料健康图谱”和叙述性摘要。
我们从 100,949 篇独特的文章中筛选出 3,587 篇符合纳入标准的文章,用于创建系统的证据图谱。从纳入研究中提取的元数据的塑料健康图谱可在 https://osf.io/fhw7d/ 上免费获取,本报告还包括总结表、图表和总体观察结果。
我们首次编制了一份证据图谱,汇集了来自不同化学类别的各种塑料相关化学物质的人类健康研究,以便为利益相关者(包括研究人员、监管机构和有关个人)提供一种高效的方式来获取有关该主题的已发表文献,并确定知识空白。我们还提供了数据群集的示例,以促进系统评价和研究空白,以帮助指导未来的研究工作。在研究塑料相关化学物质对人类健康的潜在影响时,在研究的人群、暴露和结果的广度方面存在广泛的差距。没有发现关于微塑料和/或纳米塑料对人类健康影响的研究,在我们搜索的 1,202 种已知危险并确认正在生产的添加剂中,有 26 种没有研究。很少有研究涉及最近“替代”化学物质,如有机磷阻燃剂、邻苯二甲酸酯替代品和双酚类似物。我们呼吁对化学物质监管进行范式转变,即在将新的塑料化学物质引入消费品之前,对其进行严格的安全性测试,并在其整个生命周期(包括老年和代际)在人类体内进行持续的上市后生物监测,以监测其水平和健康影响。