Incidence of nephrolithiasis in relation to environmental exposure to lead and cadmium in a population study

Azusa Hara, Wen-Yi Yang, Thibault Petit, Zhen-Yu Zhang, Yu-Mei Gu, Fang-Fei Wei, Lotte Jacobs, Augustine N. Odili, Lutgarde Thijs, Tim S. Nawrot, Jan A. Staessen*

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

    Abstract

    Whether environmental exposure to nephrotoxic agents that potentially interfere with calcium homeostasis, such as lead and cadmium, contribute to the incidence of nephrolithiasis needs further clarification. We investigated the relation between nephrolithiasis incidence and environmental lead and cadmium exposure in a general population. In 1302 participants randomly recruited from a Flemish population (50.9% women; mean age, 47.9 years), we obtained baseline measurements (1985-2005) of blood lead (BPb), blood cadmium (BCd), 24-h urinary cadmium (UCd) and covariables. We monitored the incidence of kidney stones until October 6, 2014. We used Cox regression to calculate multivariable-adjusted hazard ratios for nephrolithiasis. At baseline, geometric mean BPb, BCd and UCd was 0.29 mu mol/L, 9.0 nmol/L, and 8.5 nmol per 24 h, respectively. Over 11.5 years (median), nephrolithiasis occurred in 40 people. Contrasting the low and top tertiles of the distributions, the sex- and age-standardized rates of nephrolithiasis expressed as events per 1000 person-years were 0.68 vs. 3.36 (p = 0.0016) for BPb, 1.80 vs. 3.28 (p=0.11) for BCd, and 1.65 vs. 2.95 (p=0.28) for UCd. In continuous analysis, with adjustments applied for sex, age, serum magnesium, and 24-h urinary volume and calcium, the hazard ratios expressing the risk associated with a doubling of the exposure biomarkers were 1.35 (p = 0.015) for BPb, 1.13 (p = 0.22) for BCd, and 1.23 (p = 0.070) for UCd. In conclusion, our results suggest that environmental lead exposure is a risk factor for nephrolithiasis in the general population.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)1-8
    JournalEnvironmental Research
    Volume145
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Feb 2016

    Keywords

    • Cadmium
    • Lead
    • Nephrolithiasis
    • Population science
    • Risk stratification

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