Dietary intake of polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins and furans, adiposity and obesity status.
Khoury, N.; Martínez, M.Á.; Paz-Graniel, I.; Martínez-González, M.Á.; Corella, D.; Castañer, O.; Martínez, J.A.; Alonso-Gómez, Á.M.; Wärnberg, J.; Vioque, J.; Romaguera, D.; López-Miranda, J.; Estruch, R.; Tinahones, F.J.; Lapetra, J.; Serra-Majem, J.L.; Bueno-Cavanillas, A.; Tur, J.A.; Cinza Sanjurjo, Sergio; Pintó, X.; Gaforio, J.J.; Matía-Martín, P.; Vidal, J.; Vázquez, C.; Daimiel, L.; Ros, E.; Sayon-Orea, C.; Sorlí, J.V.; Pérez-Vega, K.-A.; Garcia-Rios, A.; Bellvert, N.G.; Gómez-Gracia, E.; Zulet, M.A.; Chaplin, A.; Casas, R.; Salcedo-Bellido, I.; Tojal-Sierra, L.; Bernal-Lopez, M.-R.; Vázquez-Ruiz, Z.; Asensio, E.M.; Goday, A.; Peña-Orihuela, P.J.; Signes-Pastor, A.J.; Garcia-Arellano, A.; Fitó, M.; Babio, N.; Salas-Salvadó, J.

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Identificadores
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Data de publicación
2023Título da revista
Environmental Research
Tipo de contido
Artigo
MeSH
Middle Aged | Humans | Female | Male | Polychlorinated Dibenzodioxins | Dibenzofurans | Dioxins | Adiposity | Furans | Overweight | Obesity, Abdominal | Cross-Sectional Studies | Prospective Studies | Dibenzofurans, Polychlorinated | Eating | Polychlorinated BiphenylsResumo
Introduction: The principal source of exposure to Polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins and polychlorinated dibenzo-p-furans (PCDD/Fs) in humans comes from food intake. PCDD/Fs, are a family of potential endocrine disruptors and have been associated with different chronic diseases such as diabetes and hypertension. However, studies assessing the relationship between dietary exposure to PCDD/Fs and adiposity or obesity status in a middle-aged population are limited. Objective: To assess cross-sectionally and longitudinally the associations between estimated dietary intake (DI) of PCDD/Fs and body mass index (BMI), waist circumference, and the prevalence/incidence of obesity and abdominal obesity in a middle-aged population. Methods: In 5899 participants aged 55-75 years (48% women) living with overweight/obesity from the PREDIMED-plus cohort, PCDD/Fs DI was estimated using a 143-item validated food-frequency questionnaire, and the levels of food PCDD/F expressed as Toxic Equivalents (TEQ). Consequently, cross-sectional and prospective associations between baseline PCDD/Fs DI (in pgTEQ/week) and adiposity or obesity status were assessed at baseline and after 1-year follow-up using multivariable cox, logistic or linear regression models. Results: Compared to participants in the first PCDD/F DI tertile, those in the highest tertile presented a higher BMI (?-coefficient [confidence interval]) (0.43kg/m2 [0.22; 0.64]; P-trend <0.001), a higher waist circumference (1.11 cm [0.55; 1.66]; P-trend <0.001), and a higher prevalence of obesity and abdominal obesity (1.05 [1.01; 1.09] and 1.02 [1.00; 1.03]; P-trend = 0.09 and 0.027, respectively). In the prospective analysis, participants in the top PCDD/F DI baseline tertile showed an increase in waist circumference compared with those in the first tertile after 1-year of follow-up (?-coefficient 0.37 cm [0.06; 0.70]; P-trend = 0.015). Conclusion: Higher DI of PCDD/Fs was positively associated with adiposity parameters and obesity status at baseline and with changes in waist circumference after 1-year of follow-up in subjects living with overweight/obesity. Further large prospective studies using a different population with longer follow-up periods are warranted in the future to strengthen our results.
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