| Literature DB >> 20716508 |
Carolyn M Gallagher1, Jaymie R Meliker.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cadmium exposure has been inconsistently related to blood pressure.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20716508 PMCID: PMC3002186 DOI: 10.1289/ehp.1002077
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health Perspect ISSN: 0091-6765 Impact factor: 9.031
Study characteristics, key findings, and WOE codes.
| Study population | Exposure measure | Covariates | Outcome measure | Key findings | Study design/WOE codes | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Large representative population-based samples, with smoking-stratified findings | ||||||
| U.S. men and women ≥ 20 years of age; | BCd, spot UCd without direct dilution adjustment | Age, sex, race, education, cotinine, alcohol, BMI, menopause, anti-HTN drug use, blood lead, and urinary creatinine for UCd | HTN = mean SBP ≥ 140 mmHg, mean DBP ≥ 90 mmHg; self-reported physician diagnosis, or drug use; SBP, DBP, 3–4 measures | Never-smokers: | Cross-sectional (NHANES 1999–2004), cadmium-weighted sample:
A A A/B B | |
| U.S. men and women 20–74 years of age; mean UCd: men, 1.1 μg/L; women, 1.3 μg/L; | Spot UCd, adjusted for specific gravity | Age, sex, race, Quetelet’s index, family history HTN, and anti-HTN drug use; never-smokers exclude HTN drug use | HTN = anti-HTN drug use; SBP, DBP, three measures | Never-smokers: | Cross-sectional (NHANES II 1978–1979), cadmium-unweighted sample:
B A/B A B | |
| Small studies, limited to nonsmokers | ||||||
| Adults 16–60 years of age, near Bangkok, Thailand, no occupational exposures; | 3-hr UCd | Age, BMI, urine lead; excluded subjects on anti-HTN drugs or any medication on a regular basis | SBP, DBP, MBP | Never-smokers: | Cross-sectional:
B B A C | |
| Never-smoking women 31–77 years of age, from routine and HTN clinics, Taiwan, near cadmium-polluted area; mean BCd: no HTN ( | BCd, 24-hr UCd, creatinine adjusted | Age, BMI; excluded smokers and occupational exposure history, proteinuria, hematuria, low creatinine clearance | MBP, averaged from three different visits on three different days | BCd + MBP | Cross-sectional:
B B A C | |
| “Peasant” women 40–85 years of age from rural Croatia, all nonsmokers (included former smokers); | BCd | Area of residence (high vs. low calcium intake), age, alcohol, BMI, serum lead; excluded subjects on drugs that could affect BP | SBP, DBP | BCd + SBP | Cross-sectional:
B B A/B C | |
| Male bankers from Modena, Italy; mean age, 37–38 years; epidemiological screening: BCd mean hypertensive and normotensive, 0.58/0.44 μg/L; UCd (creatinine adjusted) mean hypertensive andnormotensive, 1.36/1.23 μg/g; | BCd; spot UCd, creatinine adjusted | Matched for age, smoking, anthropometrics, work conditions; excluded taking drugs for HTN | SBP > 140 and/or DBP > 90; 2 readings | Mean BCd: cases, 0.41 μg/L; controls, 0.25 μg/L ( | Case–control:
A B A C | |
| Large studies, not limited to nonsmokers | ||||||
| Nonoccupationally exposed, ≥ 50 years of age, from three “unpolluted” rural areas, Japan; | BCd; spot UCd, creatinine adjusted | Age, smoking (nonsmoker, including ex-smoker, and current smokers) alcohol intake, serum creatinine; BMI, beta-2 microglobulin | HTN = SBP > 140 or DBP > 90 or taking anti-HTN drugs | BCd o HTN | Cross-sectional:
B C B/C C | |
| Korean men and women ≥ 20 years of age; | BCd; T1, 0.18–1.28 μg/L (ref); T2, 1.29–1.86 μg/L; T3, 1.87–5.52 μg/L | Age, sex, education, smoker (never, ex, current), alcohol intake, BMI, self-reported HTN, family HTN, blood lead; also stratified by serum creatinine | HTN = SBP ≥ 140 or DBP ≥ 90 or self-report; SBP, DBP; MBP = DBP + pulse pressure/3 | BCd T2 + SBP | Cross-sectional (KHANES 2005):
B A/B B/C B | |
| Men 55–75 years of age from Rome, Italy; excluded treated HTN subjects; | BCd | Age, alcohol consumption, number of cigarettes/day, BMI, HDL cholesterol, non-HDL cholesterol, serum lead, heart rate, driving min/day, skin-fold thickness | SBP, DBP; MBP = DBP + 1/3(SBP − DBP) | BCd o SBP | Cross-sectional (New Risk Factors Project, June 1989 to December 1990):
B B A/B B | |
| Small studies, not limited to nonsmokers | ||||||
| Men and women ≥ 20 years of age; 2 rural areas in Belgium, one near three zinc smelters; arithmetic mean BCd for high and low exposure areas, 0.98/0.08 μg/L; geometric mean 24-hr UCd for high and low exposure areas, 9.8/7.1 nmol/24-hr urine; | BCd, 24-hr UCd | Sex, age, BMI, γ-glutamyl-transferase, blood glucose, current smoker versus nonsmoker, anti-HTN treatment, total cholesterol, HDL | SBP, DBP; MBP = DBP + 1/3 pulse pressure; average of five consecutive readings | UCd – SBP | Cross-sectional (1991–1994):
A C B/C B | |
| Same as above, except included time period before interventions to reduce exposure levels; baseline geometric mean BCd for men and for women, 1.26/1.23 μg/L; baseline geometric mean 24 hr UCd for men and for women, 11.8/8.8 nmol/24 hr; | BCd, 24-hr UCd | SBP, DBP; average of five consecutive readings; time-integrated analysis of SBP and DBP averaged over fifteen readings, 1985–1995; 24-hr ambulatory BP | Age at baseline, change in BMI, γ-glutamyl-transferase, urinary Na:K, anti-HTN drugs, smoking (no change, quit, acquired), oral contraceptive use | BCd – DBP among men never on anti-HTN drugs | Cross-sectional (CadmiBel 1985–1989 and Prospective PheeCad compared 1991–1995 with 1985–1989):
A C B/C B | |
| Croatian men 20–54 years of age, andrology clinic; excluded occupationally exposed, HTN-treated subjects, renal or other disease that could affect BP; median BCd, 0.83 μg/L; | BCd | SBP, DBP | BMI, blood lead, alcohol, blood copper, smoking | BCd o SBP | Case–control:
B C B B | |
Abbreviations: BMI, body mass index; HDL, high-density lipoprotein; KHANES, Korean National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey; MBP, mean blood pressure; nM/3, nanomolar/3-hr urine; NHANES, National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey; T, tertile.
Key findings: +, significant positive association; −, significant inverse association; o, null association.
WOE codes: 1, association; 2, environmental equivalence; 3, population equivalence; 4, bias.
Figure 1BCd dose–response comparisons: HTN ORs and 95% CIs. Tellez-Plaza et al. (2008): HTN = mean SBP ≥ 140, mean DBP ≥ 90 mmHg, self-report of a physician diagnosis or anti-HTN drug use; BCd (μg/L) quartiles: Q1 (ref), ≤ 0.20; Q2, 0.20–0.40; Q3, 0.40–0.70; Q4, ≥ 0.70. Eum et al. (2008): HTN = SBP ≥ 140, DBP ≥ 90 mmHg, or self-report of HTN; BCd (μg/L) tertiles: T1 (reference), 0.18–1.28; T2, 1.29–1.86; T3, 1.87–5.52. All data are for men and women combined. Sizes of different point estimate symbols for quartiles and tertiles reflect increasing BCd levels.
Figure 5UCd: SBP and DBP, women and men separately (partial regression coefficients and 95% CIs). Whittemore et al. (1991): spot UCd (μg/L) adjusted for specific gravity, untransformed; 95% CI visually estimated from published graphs. Staessen et al. (2000): 24-hr UCd (nmol) log transformed; 95% CIs calculated as 1.96*SE. Satarug et al. (2005): 3-hr UCd (nanograms) log transformed; 95% CIs estimated from coefficient and t-value. Size of different point estimates varies to identify different studies without quantitative or qualitative ranking.
Figure 2BCd: SBP and DBP, women and men separately (partial regression coefficients and 95% CIs).Staessen et al. (2000): BCd (nmol/L) = continuous log-transformed; 95% CI, coefficient ± 1.96 × SE. Pizent et al. (2001): BCd (μg/L) = continuous untransformed; 95% CI, coefficient ± 1.96 × SE. Tellez-Plaza et al. 2008: BCd (nmol/L), 90th to 10th percentile. Size of point estimate symbols varies to identify different
Figure 3BCd dose–response comparisons: SBP and DBP (partial regression coefficients and 95% CIs) Tellez-Plaza et al. (2008): BCd (μg/L) quartiles: Q1 (reference), ≤ 0.20; Q2, 0.20–0.40; Q3, 0.40–0.70; Q4, ≥ 0.70. Eum et al. (2008): BCd (μg/L) tertiles: T1 (reference), 0.18–1.28; T2, 1.29–1.86; T3, 1.87–5.52. All data are for men and women combined. Sizes of different point estimate symbols for quartiles and tertiles reflect increasing BCd levels.
Figure 4UCd and HTN (ORs and 95% CIs). Kurihara et al. (2004): HTN = SBP ≥ 140 or DBP > 90 mmHg, UCd (μg/g) = 84% upper cut-off level is 4.47 μg/g creatinine for men and 6.67 μg/g for women; spot urine sample, creatinine adjusted. Tellez-Plaza et al. (2008): HTN = mean SBP ≥ 140, mean DBP ≥ 90 mmHg, self-report of a physician diagnosis, or anti-HTN drug use; UCd (nmol/L) = 90th:10th percentile; spot urine sample, statistical model adjusted for creatinine. Whittemore et al. (1991): HTN = anti-HTN drug use, UCd (μg/L) = continuous untransformed; spot urine sample, specific gravity adjusted. Size of different point estimate symbols varies to identify different studies without quantitative or qualitative ranking.