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Título
The association of urine metals and metal mixtures with cardiovascular incidence in an adult population from Spain: the Hortega Follow-Up Study
Autor
Año del Documento
2019
Editorial
Oxfor University Press
Descripción
Producción Científica
Documento Fuente
International Journal of Epidemiology, Abril 2019, vol. 48, p. 1-11
Resumen
Background: The association of low-level exposure to metals and metal mixtures with cardiovascular incidence in the general population has rarely been studied. We flexibly evaluated the association of urinary metals and metal mixtures concentrations with cardiovascular diseases in a representative sample of a general population from Spain.
Methods: Urine antimony (Sb), barium (Ba), cadmium (Cd), chromium (Cr), cobalt (Co), copper (Cu), molybdenum (Mo), vanadium (V) and zinc (Zn) were measured in 1171 adults without clinical cardiovascular diseases, who participated in the Hortega Study. Cox proportional hazard models were used for evaluating the association between single metals and cardiovascular incidence. We used a Probit extension of Bayesian Kernel Machine Regression (BKMR-P) to handle metal mixtures in a survival setting.
Results: In single-metal models, the hazard ratios [confidence intervals (CIs)] of cardiovascular incidence, comparing the 80th to the 20th percentiles of metal distributions, were 1.35 (1.06, 1.72) for Cu, 1.43 (1.07, 1.90) for Zn, 1.51 (1.13, 2.03) for Sb, 1.46 (1.13, 1.88) for Cd, 1.64 (1.05, 2.58) for Cr and 1.31 (1.01, 1.71) for V. BKMR-P analysis was confirmatory of these findings, supporting that Cu, Zn, Sb, Cd, Cr and V are related to cardiovascular incidence in the presence of the other metals. Cd and Sb showed the highest
posterior inclusion probabilities.
Conclusions: Urine Cu, Zn, Sb, Cd, Cr and V were independently associated with increased cardiovascular risk at levels relevant for the general population of Spain. Urine metals in the mixture were also jointly associated with cardiovascular incidence, with Cd and Sb being the most important components of the mixture.
Palabras Clave
Urine metals, cardiovascular incidence, population-based, cohort study, BKMR
ISSN
0300-5771
Revisión por pares
SI
Patrocinador
This work was supported by the Strategic Action for Research in Health sciences (CP12/03080, PI10/0082, P037093) from the European Commission; CIBER Fisiopatología Obesidad y Nutrición (CIBERobn) (CIBER-02–08-2009, CB06/03 and CB12/03/30016); CIBER de Diabetes y Enfermedades Metabólicas Relacionadas (CIBERDEM CB07/0/018); and US National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) (RO1 ES028805; P42ES10349 and P30ES009089). The Strategic Action for Research in Health Sciences, CIBERDEM and CIBEROBN, are initiatives from Carlos III Health Institute Madrid and the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness and co-funded with European Funds for Regional Development (FEDER).I13/01848, PI07/0497 and PI11/00726); GRUPOS 03/101, PROMETEO/2009/029 and 2005/027, AMP07/075 and ACOMP/2013/039 from the Valencia Government; GRS/279/A/08 from Castilla-Leon Government; European Network of Excellence Ingenious Hypercare (EPSSInternational
Idioma
eng
Tipo de versión
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Derechos
openAccess
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