4.8 Article

Exposome epidemiology for suspect environmental chemical exposures during pregnancy linked to subsequent breast cancer diagnosis

Journal

ENVIRONMENT INTERNATIONAL
Volume 178, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envint.2023.108112

Keywords

Cancer; Exposome; Metabolomics; Pregnancy

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Breast cancer, accounting for 12% of all new annual cancer cases worldwide, is the most common cancer globally. An exposome research study using high-resolution mass spectrometry identified suspect environmental chemicals associated with breast cancer and discovered potential mechanistic associations with the disease.
Breast cancer is now the most common cancer globally, accounting for 12% of all new annual cancer cases worldwide. Despite epidemiologic studies having established a number of risk factors, knowledge of chemical exposure risks is limited to a relatively small number of chemicals. In this exposome research study, we used non-targeted, high-resolution mass spectrometry of pregnancy cohort biospecimens in the Child Health and Devel-opment Studies to test for associations with breast cancer identified via the California Cancer Registry. Second and third trimester archival samples were analyzed from 182 women who subsequently developed breast cancer and 384 randomly selected women who did not develop breast cancer. Environmental chemicals were annotated with the Toxin and Toxin-Target Database for chemical signals that were higher in breast cancer cases and used with an exposome epidemiology analytic framework to identify suspect chemicals and associated metabolic networks. Network and pathway enrichment analyses showed consistent linkage in both second and third tri-mesters to inflammation pathways, including linoleate, arachidonic acid and prostaglandins, and identified new suspect environmental chemicals associated with breast cancer, i.e., an N-substituted piperidine insecticide and a common commercial product, 2,4-dinitrophenol, linked to variations in amino acid and nucleotide pathways in second trimester and benzo[a]carbazole and a benzoate derivative linked to glycan and amino sugar metabolism in third trimester. The results identify new suspect environmental chemical risk factors for breast cancer and provide an exposome epidemiology framework for discovery of suspect environmental chemicals and potential mechanistic associations with breast cancer.

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