4.8 Article

Rice consumption contributes to arsenic exposure in US women

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1109127108

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Funding

  1. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS), US National Institutes of Health (NIH) [P20 ES018175, P42 ES007373]
  2. National Cancer Institute, NIH [R25CA134286]
  3. US Environmental Protection Agency [RD-83459901-0]
  4. NIEHS [5P42 ES004940]

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Emerging data indicate that rice consumption may lead to potentially harmful arsenic exposure. However, few human data are available, and virtually none exist for vulnerable periods such as pregnancy. Here we document a positive association between rice consumption and urinary arsenic excretion, a biomarker of recent arsenic exposure, in 229 pregnant women. At a 6-mo prenatal visit, we collected a urine sample and 3-d dietary record for water, fish/seafood, and rice. We also tested women's home tap water for arsenic, which we combined with tap water consumption to estimate arsenic exposure through water. Women who reported rice intake (n = 73) consumed a median of 28.3 g/d, which is similar to 0.5 cup of cooked rice each day. In general linear models adjusted for age and urinary dilution, both rice consumption (g, dry mass/d) and arsenic exposure through water (mu g/d) were significantly associated with natural log-transformed total urinary arsenic ((beta) over cap (rice) = 0.009, (beta) over cap (water) = 0.028, both P < 0.0001), as well as inorganic arsenic, monomethylarsonic acid, and dimethylarsinic acid (each P < 0.005). Based on total arsenic, consumption of 0.56 cup/d of cooked rice was comparable to drinking 1 L/d of 10 mu g As/L water, the current US maximum contaminant limit. US rice consumption varies, averaging similar to 0.5 cup/d, with Asian Americans consuming an average of > 2 cups/d. Rice arsenic content and speciation also vary, with some strains predominated by dimethylarsinic acid, particularly those grown in the United States. Our findings along with others indicate that rice consumption should be considered when designing arsenic reduction strategies in the United States.

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