Shao Kuanliang, Zou Runyu, Zhang Zhuoyue, Mandemaker Laurens D B, Timbie Sarah, Smith Ronald D, Durkin Amanda M, Dusza Hanna M, Meirer Florian, Weckhuysen Bert M, Alderete Tanya L, Vermeulen Roel, Walker Douglas I
Gangarosa Department of Environmental Health, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia, USA; email:
Division of Toxicology, Institute for Risk Assessment Sciences, Department of Population Health Sciences, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Utrecht University, Utrecht, The Netherlands.
Annu Rev Pharmacol Toxicol. 2025 Jan;65(1):567-585. doi: 10.1146/annurev-pharmtox-030424-112828. Epub 2024 Dec 17.
Although plastic pollution and exposure to plastic-related compounds have received worldwide attention, health risks associated with micro- and nanoplastics (MNPs) are largely unknown. Emerging evidence suggests MNPs are present in human biofluids and tissue, including blood, breast milk, stool, lung tissue, and placenta; however, exposure assessment is limited and the extent of human exposure to MNPs is not well known. While there is a critical need to establish robust and scalable biomonitoring strategies to assess human exposure to MNPs and plastic-related chemicals, over 10,000 chemicals have been linked to plastic manufacturing with no existing standardized approaches to account for even a fraction of these exposures. This review provides an overview of the status of methods for measuring MNPs and associated plastic-related chemicals in humans, with a focus on approaches that could be adapted for population-wide biomonitoring and integration with biological response measures to develop hypotheses on potential health effects of plastic exposures. We also examine the exposure risks associated with the widespread use of chemical additives in plastics. Despite advancements in analytical techniques, there remains a pressing need for standardized measurement protocols and untargeted, high-throughput analysis methods to enable comprehensive MNP biomonitoring to identify key MNP exposures in human populations. This review aims to merge insights into the toxicological effects of MNPs and plastic additives with an evaluation of analytical challenges, advocating for enhanced research methods to fully assess, understand, and mitigate the public health implications of MNPs.
尽管塑料污染以及接触与塑料相关的化合物已受到全球关注,但与微塑料和纳米塑料(MNPs)相关的健康风险在很大程度上仍不为人知。新出现的证据表明,MNPs存在于人体生物流体和组织中,包括血液、母乳、粪便、肺组织和胎盘;然而,暴露评估有限,人类接触MNPs的程度尚不清楚。虽然迫切需要建立强大且可扩展的生物监测策略来评估人类对MNPs和与塑料相关的化学物质的暴露,但已有超过10000种化学物质与塑料制造有关,甚至没有现有的标准化方法来解释这些暴露中的一小部分。本综述概述了测量人体中MNPs及相关塑料相关化学物质的方法现状,重点关注可适用于全人群生物监测并与生物反应测量相结合以形成关于塑料暴露潜在健康影响假设的方法。我们还研究了塑料中广泛使用化学添加剂所带来的暴露风险。尽管分析技术有所进步,但仍迫切需要标准化的测量方案和非靶向的高通量分析方法,以实现全面的MNP生物监测,从而确定人群中关键的MNP暴露情况。本综述旨在将对MNPs和塑料添加剂毒理学效应的见解与对分析挑战的评估相结合,倡导加强研究方法,以全面评估、理解并减轻MNPs对公众健康的影响。