Department of Epidemiology and Environmental Health, School of Public Health and Health Professions, University at Buffalo, United States of America; Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, College of Public Health, Temple University, United States of America.
Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, College of Public Health, Temple University, United States of America.
Sci Total Environ. 2024 Jun 1;927:172303. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.172303. Epub 2024 Apr 9.
Children are at high risk for exposure to toxic metals and are vulnerable to their effects. Significant research has been conducted evaluating the role of these metals on immune dysfunction, characterized by biologic and clinical outcomes. However, there are inconsistencies in these studies. The objective of the present review is to critically evaluate the existing literature on the association between toxic metals (lead, mercury, arsenic, and cadmium) and pediatric immune dysfunction.
Seven databases (PubMed (NLM), Embase (Elsevier), CINAHL (Ebsco), Web of Science (Clarivate Analytics), ProQuest Public Health Database, and ProQuest Environmental Science Collection) were searched following Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines in February 2024. Rayaan software identified duplicates and screened by title and abstract in a blinded and independent review process. The remaining full texts were reviewed for content and summarized. Exclusions during the title, abstract, and full-text reviews included: 1) not original research, 2) not epidemiology, 3) did not include toxic metals, 4) did not examine an immune health outcome, or 5) not pediatric (>18 years). This systematic review protocol followed the PRISMA guidelines. Rayaan was used to screen records using title and abstract by two blinded and independent reviewers. This process was repeated for full-text article screening selection.
The search criteria produced 7906 search results; 2456 duplicate articles were removed across search engines. In the final review, 79 studies were included which evaluated the association between toxic metals and outcomes indicative of pediatric immune dysregulation.
The existing literature suggests an association between toxic metals and pediatric immune dysregulation. Given the imminent threat of infectious diseases demonstrated by the recent COVID-19 epidemic in addition to increases in allergic disease, understanding how ubiquitous exposure to these metals in early life can impact immune response, infection risk, and vaccine response is imperative.
儿童面临着接触有毒金属的高风险,并且容易受到其影响。已经进行了大量研究来评估这些金属对免疫功能障碍的作用,其特征是生物学和临床结果。然而,这些研究存在不一致之处。本综述的目的是批判性地评估现有关于有毒金属(铅、汞、砷和镉)与儿童免疫功能障碍之间关联的文献。
根据系统评价和荟萃分析的首选报告项目(PRISMA)指南,于 2024 年 2 月在 7 个数据库(PubMed(NLM)、Embase(Elsevier)、CINAHL(Ebsco)、Web of Science(Clarivate Analytics)、ProQuest 公共卫生数据库和 ProQuest 环境科学收藏)中进行了搜索。Rayaan 软件通过标题和摘要识别重复项,并在盲法和独立审查过程中进行筛选。对剩余的全文进行内容审查并总结。在标题、摘要和全文审查过程中排除的内容包括:1)非原始研究,2)非流行病学,3)不包括有毒金属,4)未检查免疫健康结果,或 5)非儿科(>18 岁)。本系统评价方案遵循 PRISMA 指南。Rayaan 用于通过两名盲法和独立的审阅者使用标题和摘要筛选记录。对全文文章筛选选择重复了此过程。
搜索标准产生了 7906 条搜索结果;跨搜索引擎去除了 2456 条重复文章。在最终审查中,共纳入 79 项研究,评估了有毒金属与指示儿童免疫失调的结果之间的关联。
现有文献表明有毒金属与儿童免疫失调之间存在关联。鉴于最近 COVID-19 疫情显示出传染病的迫在眉睫的威胁,以及过敏疾病的增加,了解早期生活中接触这些金属如何影响免疫反应、感染风险和疫苗反应至关重要。