Mazzoli Riccardo, Filippini Tommaso, Iamandii Inga, De Pasquale Lisa, Veneri Federica, Birnbaum Linda S, Rothman Kenneth J, Vinceti Marco
Environmental, Genetic and Nutritional Epidemiology Research Center (CREAGEN), Section of Public Health, Department of Biomedical, Metabolic and Neural Sciences, University of Modena and Reggio Emilia, Modena, Italy.
Department of Biomedical, Metabolic and Neural Sciences, University of Modena and Reggio Emilia, Modena, Italy.
Environ Health. 2025 Oct 9;24(1):73. doi: 10.1186/s12940-025-01226-y.
Fluoride exposure and its effects on human health are controversial and highly debated. While beneficial in preventing dental caries, fluoride has been linked to skeletal and dental fluorosis at high levels, as well as other adverse health endpoints in children and adults. However, the safe range of exposure for bone health remains poorly defined. We used existing literature to quantify the dose-response relation between fluoride exposure and bone health, focusing on fracture risk and bone mineral density (BMD).
We conducted a systematic review and dose-response meta-analysis by searching literature in online databases (MEDLINE/PubMed, Embase and Web of Science) up to August 26, 2025, and by pooling results of studies examining fluoride exposure and its associations with bone health outcomes, namely fracture risk and BMD. We also conducted stratified analyses by sex, age, and fracture site. This study is registered in PROSPERO (CRD42022321899).
We included 37 studies published between 1945 and 2024. 10 pertained to bone density only; 19 to bone fractures only; and eight to both outcomes. We found a non-linear, positive relation between fluoride exposure and fracture risk, with an indication of an approximate threshold around 1.5 mg/L of fluoride in drinking water and a nearly linear increasing fracture risk above that concentration (risk ratios of 1.06, 1.19 and 1.35 at 2.0, 3.0 and 4.0 mg/L, respectively, compared to null exposure). Sex-specific dose-response analyses, available only for fragility fractures, indicated an effect in females but little or nothing in males. The association between fluoride and BMD was inconsistent, showing opposite trends for different bone sites (hip and spine) and amounts of exposure, and by sex. Among females aged over 50 years, an association of drinking water fluoride with fragility fracture risk started as early as around 0.5 mg/L (risk ratio of 1.26 at 1.0 mg/L).
This study indicates increased risk of fractures with fluoride exposure > 1.5 mg/L in drinking water, with an enhanced susceptibility in postmenopausal females. These findings, which appear consistent with those yielded by recent pooled analysis related to other endpoints in children, may be helpful in assessing the risk-benefit profile for fluoride exposure.
not applicable.
The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s12940-025-01226-y.
氟暴露及其对人类健康的影响存在争议且备受热议。氟在预防龋齿方面有益,但高剂量的氟与骨骼和牙齿氟中毒有关,还与儿童和成人的其他不良健康结局相关。然而,骨骼健康的安全暴露范围仍不明确。我们利用现有文献量化氟暴露与骨骼健康之间的剂量反应关系,重点关注骨折风险和骨矿物质密度(BMD)。
我们通过检索截至2025年8月26日的在线数据库(MEDLINE/PubMed、Embase和Web of Science)中的文献,并汇总研究氟暴露及其与骨骼健康结局(即骨折风险和BMD)关联的研究结果,进行了系统评价和剂量反应荟萃分析。我们还按性别、年龄和骨折部位进行了分层分析。本研究已在PROSPERO(CRD42022321899)注册。
我们纳入了1945年至2024年发表的37项研究。10项仅涉及骨密度;19项仅涉及骨折;8项涉及两者。我们发现氟暴露与骨折风险之间存在非线性正相关,表明饮用水中氟含量约为1.5mg/L时存在一个近似阈值,高于该浓度骨折风险几乎呈线性增加(与无暴露相比,2.0、3.0和4.0mg/L时的风险比分别为1.06、1.19和1.35)。仅针对脆性骨折的性别特异性剂量反应分析表明,女性有影响,而男性影响很小或无影响。氟与BMD之间的关联不一致,不同骨部位(髋部和脊柱)、暴露量以及性别呈现相反趋势。在50岁以上女性中,饮用水氟与脆性骨折风险的关联早在约0.5mg/L时就开始出现(1.0mg/L时的风险比为1.26)。
本研究表明,饮用水中氟暴露>1.5mg/L时骨折风险增加,绝经后女性易感性增强。这些发现似乎与近期关于儿童其他终点的汇总分析结果一致,可能有助于评估氟暴露的风险效益概况。
不适用。
在线版本包含可在10.1186/s12940-025-01226-y获取的补充材料。