Schilling Kathrin, Ujueta Francisco, Gao Siyue, Anderson Will A, Escolar Esteban, Mon Ana, Navas-Acien Ana, Lamas Gervasio A
Department of Environmental Health Sciences, Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health, New York, NY, United States.
Cardiovascular Medicine Division, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, United States.
Metallomics. 2025 May 5;17(5). doi: 10.1093/mtomcs/mfaf010.
Chelation therapy is a promising approach to mitigating health risks associated with toxic metal exposure, which contributes to cardiovascular disease, neurotoxicity, and other chronic conditions. disodium ethylene diamine tetraacetic acid (EDTA) is widely used, but its optimal dosing strategy remains unclear. This study evaluates the dose-dependent efficacy of EDTA in mobilizing toxic metals, including lead (Pb), cadmium (Cd), and gadolinium (Gd), while minimizing the loss of essential metals like copper (Cu) and manganese (Mn) to optimize therapeutic safety and efficacy. Ten volunteers (≥50 years) received 3 infusions at doses of 0.5, 1, and 3 g of EDTA over 30 min, 1 h, and 3 h, respectively. Urine and blood samples were analyzed pre- and post-infusion to assess pharmacokinetics of metal chelation. Urinary Pb excretion increased by 2200% at 0.5 g, with only a marginal gain at higher doses (3300%), supporting low-dose EDTA efficacy. Urinary Cd clearance required 3 g EDTA due to its strong tissue binding. Notably, Gd excretion increased by up to 78 000% even at 0.5 g EDTA, highlighting EDTA's potential to reduce long-term Gd burden post-MRI. Urinary excretion of essential metals varied, with Mn and Zn loss increasing at higher EDTA doses, underscoring the need for dose optimization while Cu and Ca only showed a clear increase urinary excretion at 3 g EDTA. Overall, a 0.5 g EDTA dose effectively mobilized Pb and Gd while minimizing essential metal depletion, reducing infusion time to 30 min, and improving patient compliance. These findings align with TACT and TACT 2 studies, reinforcing EDTA's long-term benefits in Pb reduction and supporting low-dose EDTA as a safe, efficient, and well-tolerated detoxification strategy.
螯合疗法是一种很有前景的方法,可减轻与有毒金属暴露相关的健康风险,有毒金属暴露会导致心血管疾病、神经毒性和其他慢性疾病。乙二胺四乙酸二钠(EDTA)被广泛使用,但其最佳给药策略仍不明确。本研究评估了EDTA在动员包括铅(Pb)、镉(Cd)和钆(Gd)在内的有毒金属方面的剂量依赖性疗效,同时尽量减少铜(Cu)和锰(Mn)等必需金属的流失,以优化治疗的安全性和疗效。10名志愿者(≥50岁)分别在30分钟、1小时和3小时内接受了剂量为0.5克、1克和3克EDTA的3次输注。在输注前后分析尿液和血液样本,以评估金属螯合的药代动力学。0.5克剂量时尿铅排泄增加了2200%,高剂量时(3300%)仅略有增加,这支持了低剂量EDTA的疗效。由于镉与组织的强结合力,尿镉清除需要3克EDTA。值得注意的是,即使在0.5克EDTA时,钆排泄量也增加了高达78000%,突出了EDTA在减少MRI后长期钆负担方面的潜力。必需金属的尿排泄情况各不相同,随着EDTA剂量的增加,锰和锌的流失增加,这凸显了剂量优化的必要性,而铜和钙仅在3克EDTA时尿排泄量有明显增加。总体而言,0.5克EDTA剂量有效地动员了铅和钆,同时尽量减少必需金属的消耗,将输注时间缩短至30分钟,并提高了患者的依从性。这些发现与TACT和TACT 2研究一致,强化了EDTA在降低铅含量方面的长期益处,并支持低剂量EDTA作为一种安全、有效且耐受性良好的解毒策略。