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Emerging Links Between Diabetes and Environmental Exposures to Arsenic and Dioxin

Emerging Links Between Diabetes and Environmental Exposures to Arsenic and Dioxin. J. Jina Shah, MD, MPH Lynn Goldman, MD, MPH Johns Hopkins School of Public Health. Diabetes: Definitions.

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Emerging Links Between Diabetes and Environmental Exposures to Arsenic and Dioxin

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  1. Emerging Links Between Diabetes and Environmental Exposures to Arsenic and Dioxin J. Jina Shah, MD, MPH Lynn Goldman, MD, MPH Johns Hopkins School of Public Health

  2. Diabetes: Definitions • “a group of heterogeneous disorders with the common elements of hyperglycemia and glucose intolerance, due to insulin deficiency, impaired effectiveness of insulin action, or both” • other elements “in its fully developed form” (Fajans, 1971, cited in Welborn, 1984) • microvascular complications • accelerated atherogenesis

  3. Classification Criteria in Evolution but Most Still Type II • More recent classifications separate etiology from severity • Increasing genetic, immunological expertise allows for more specific diagnoses • However, majority are classified by clinical and blood glucose criteria • 90% of diabetes in the world is classified Type II

  4. Why is it important?

  5. High worldwide burden of disease, high projected increase • 1997: 120-147 million people, 2.1% of population • 66 million in Asia • 22 million in Europe • 13 million in North and Latin America • 8 million in Africa • 1 million in Oceana • 2010: 213 to 215 million people (3%) • Asia and Africa to have greatest (2 to 3X) potential to increase • Asia likely to have 61% of total

  6. US Prevalence • 1998 NHIS data • 10.5 million diabetics • 5.4 million undiagnosed • 13.4 million with impaired fasting glucose • Even more with impaired glucose tolerance

  7. Prevalence of Diabetes Among Adults,1990 (BRFSS) <4% 4–6% >6%

  8. Prevalence of Diabetes Among U.S. Adults, 1993-1994 (BRFSS) <4% 4–6% >6%

  9. Prevalence of Diabetes Among US Adults, 1999 (BRFSS) <4% 4–6% >6%

  10. High Cost to Individual and Society • Costs estimated for US $92 billion in 1997 • $11,000 per capita • Direct medical and productivity costs • Some costs, such as suffering of patients and families, not quantifiable though people try to incorporate quality of life into calculations

  11. What do we know about causes?

  12. Biological Determinants • Age • Genetics • Obesity • Family history • Ethnicity • People of color: greater prevalence and severity • There is more data on African Americans and Hispanics than on Asian and Native Americans

  13. Environmental Determinants • Diet, physical activity (obesity) • Globalization, modernization, westernization • Exposures such as arsenic and dioxin • Other environmental exposures

  14. Gene-Environment Interactions Biologically vulnerable Diabetes Barker hypothesis B-cell defect Environmental factors, exposures

  15. Environmental Exposures

  16. Arsenic Ingestion - DrinkingWater • Bangladesh • Elevated PRs for glucosuria from PR=3 to 9 in one study. • PR= 1 to 3 in another study • Both with dose-response patterns • Taiwan • Prospective cohort study: RR 2.1, RR= 1.03 for every mg-L/year in arsenic exposure. • Mortality study: non significantly elevated SMRs. • Retrospective cohort study: OR 8.6 to 10 in dose response fashion.

  17. Arsenic Inhalation – Occupational • Swedish mortality studies • Glass workers OR nonsignificant • Copper Smelter workers OR 2 to 7, dose response pattern

  18. Arsenic Conclusions • Evidence of an association between arsenic and diabetes in 5 separate studies • Further study is warranted, along with consideration of precautionary steps to avoid exposure

  19. Dioxin Exposures-Environmental Releases • Residential exposures • Seveso , Italy mortality increased, not statistically significant • Jacksonville, AK Superfund site for “high” insulin concentration, ORs=9 to 56

  20. Dioxin Exposures-Veterans • Veterans • Ranch Hands • increased mean insulin, diabetes prevalence, glucose and insulin abnormalities • Those with background levels of exposure did not have significantly increased risk • Army chemical corps sprayers, increased risk

  21. Dioxin Exposures – Other Industrial Workers • IARC cohort exposed to phenoxy herbicides and chlorophenols • RR 2.25 for diabetes as underlying cause of death in exposed vs. non exposed • Other occupational cohorts with mixed findings, no clear dose-response pattern

  22. Dioxins Conclusions • “Limited but suggestive” evidence of association for dioxin (finding could be due to chance, bias, or confounding) per the IOM

  23. How much of a contribution are the exposures? • Unknown, but probably small relative to other known risk factors • IOM, VAO, Update 2000: “These studies indicate that the increased risk, if any, from herbicide or dioxin exposure appears to be small. The known predictors of diabetes risk-family history, physical inactivity and obesity continue to greatly outweigh any suggested increase from exposure to herbicides.”

  24. Recommendations • Better studies regarding environmental exposures • standard case definition for diabetes • good exposure measurements • prospective study design • adequate control for confounding variables

  25. How do we get better exposure and outcome measures? • Better tracking of exposures • Better tracking of chronic diseases for specific populations and in specific localities

  26. Risk reduction of known factors • Encourage policy initiatives to increase physical activity and promote a more sound diet for individuals and society • Address globalization, modernization, westernization, which lead to more sedentary lifestyles and higher fat diets • Take steps to reduce exposure to arsenic and dioxins

  27. Acknowledgements and Contact Info • On this project, I was supervised by Lynn Goldman, at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and supported by Physicians for Social Responsibility. • This project was not done under the Centers for Disease Control, but I am currently working at CDC. I can be contacted at zat5@cdc.gov.

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