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Environmental Substances Associated with Osteoporosis-A Scoping Review

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18020738

Keywords

osteoporosis; chemical exposure; cadmium (Cd); lead (Pb); phthalates; per; and poly-fluoroalkyl substances (PFASs); HBM4EU

Funding

  1. EU/Horizon 2020 Programme [733032 HBM4EU]

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There is evidence indicating a potential link between environmental substances such as heavy metals and industrial chemicals, and osteoporosis. However, more epidemiological research is needed to further understand the relationship between health effects and exposure to these chemicals. The results of studies are inconsistent, and there is a lack of comprehensive epidemiological studies on chemical exposure.
Introduction: Osteoporosis is a disease having adverse effects on bone health and causing fragility fractures. Osteoporosis affects approximately 200 million people worldwide, and nearly 9 million fractures occur annually. Evidence exists that, in addition to traditional risk factors, certain environmental substances may increase the risk of osteoporosis. Methods: The European Human Biomonitoring Initiative (HBM4EU) is a joint program coordinating and advancing human biomonitoring in Europe. HBM4EU investigates citizens' exposure to several environmental substances and their plausible health effects aiming to contribute to policymaking. In HBM4EU, 18 priority substances or substance groups were selected. For each, a scoping document was prepared summarizing existing knowledge and health effects. This scoping review is based on these chemical-specific scoping documents and complementary literature review. Results: A possible link between osteoporosis and the body burden of heavy metals, such as cadmium (Cd) and lead (Pb), and industrial chemicals such as phthalates and per- and poly-fluoroalkyl substances (PFASs) was identified. Conclusions: Evidence shows that environmental substances may be related to osteoporosis as an adverse health effect. Nevertheless, more epidemiological research on the relationship between health effects and exposure to these chemicals is needed. Study results are incoherent, and pervasive epidemiological studies regarding the chemical exposure are lacking.

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