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The exposome as the science of social-to-biological transitions

Journal

ENVIRONMENT INTERNATIONAL
Volume 165, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envint.2022.107312

Keywords

Exposome; Social to biological transitions; Embodiment; AOP; Toxicology; Epidemiology

Funding

  1. MRC Centre for Environment and Health, School of Public Health, Imperial College London

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This article discusses the impact of climate change, environmental degradation, and emerging infectious diseases on disease etiology, proposes the concept of the exposome, emphasizes the importance of social differences and inequalities in disease onset, suggests compatibility between lifecourse exposome and Adverse Outcome Pathways in toxicology, and advocates for social capital to be seen as the most crucial determinant.
The understanding of disease etiology and pathogenesis has radically changed as a consequence of the new challenges posed by climate change, environmental degradation and emerging infectious diseases. The awareness of the influence of distal causes (e.g. planetary changes at the roots of new pandemics), of the social environment and of early life exposures calls for innovative models of disease onset. Here we propose a scheme for the practice of epidemiology and toxicology that incorporates new recent advancements in both disciplines, under the general umbrella of the exposome. The exposome approach to disease encompasses a lifecourse perspective from conception onwards, and the investigation of the role played by all exposures individuals undergo in their lives. These include social inequalities and psychosocial influences, in addition to chemical, biological and physical exposures. We stress the role played by social differences and inequalities in the course of life as an overarching factor that influences downstream layers (including behaviours). We show that the idea of lifecourse exposome is compatible with the current interpretation of Adverse Outcome Pathways in toxicology, and in fact we propose an extension of the concept towards lifecourse Adverse Outcome Pathways. We propose to merge different research perspectives and promote an encounter between the sociological perspective of biography (using Pierre Bourdieu's conceptual framework) and biology, according to the idea of accumulated biological capital of individuals. We also propose to treat social capital (including inequalities) no longer as a confounding factor but as an overarching determinant, perhaps the most important of all because it is the one that influences all other exposures downstream. The importance of early exposures in a lifecourse perspective leads to policy implications, i.e. investing more in the various forms of capital (social, economic, cultural) in early life.

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