Daily exposure to certain
chemicals used to make plastic household items could be linked to the more than
356,000 global deaths from heart disease that occurred in 2018 alone, a new
analysis of population surveys shows.
Although the chemicals, called
phthalates, are in widespread use globally, the Middle East, South Asia, East
Asia, and the Pacific bore a much larger share of the death toll than
others—about three-fourths of the total.
For decades, experts have connected
health problems to exposure to certain phthalates found in cosmetics,
detergents, solvents, plastic pipes, bug repellants, and other products. These
chemicals break down into microscopic particles and are ingested, and studies
have linked such exposure to an increased risk of conditions ranging from obesity and diabetes to fertility issues and cancer.
Led by researchers at NYU Langone
Health, the current study focused on a kind of phthalate called di-2-ethylhexyl
phthalate (DEHP), which is used to make food containers, medical equipment, and
other plastic items softer and more flexible. Exposure has been shown in other
studies to prompt an overactive immune response (inflammation) in the heart’s
arteries, which over time is associated with increased risk of heart attack or stroke. In their new analysis, the authors estimated that
DEHP exposure contributed to 356,238 deaths, or more than 13 percent of all
global mortality from heart disease in 2018 among men and women ages 55 through
64.
“By highlighting the connection between
phthalates and a leading cause of death across the world, our findings add to
the vast body of evidence that these chemicals present a tremendous danger to
human health,” said study lead author Sara Hyman, BS, an associate research
scientist at NYU Grossman School of Medicine.
In a past study from 2021, the research
team tied phthalates to more than 50,000 premature deaths each year, mostly
from heart disease, among older Americans. Their latest investigation is
believed to be the first global estimate to date of cardiovascular mortality—or
indeed any health outcome—resulting from exposure to the chemicals, said Hyman,
who is also a graduate student at NYU School of Global
Public Health.
A report on the findings was published online April
29 in the journal Lancet eBioMedicine.
For the research, the team used health
and environmental data from dozens of population surveys to estimate DEHP
exposure across 200 countries and territories. The information included urine
samples containing chemical breakdown products left by the plastic additive.
Mortality data was obtained from the Institute for Health Metrics and
Evaluation, a research group in the United States that collects medical
information worldwide to identify trends in public health.
Among the key findings, the study showed
that losses in the combined region of East Asia and the Middle East and the
combined region of East Asia and the Pacific accounted, respectively, for about
42 percent and 32 percent of the mortality from heart disease linked to DEHP.
Specifically, India had the highest death count, at 103,587 deaths, followed by
China and Indonesia. The larger heart death risks in these populations held
true even after the researchers adjusted their statistical analysis to take into
account population size within the studied age group.
A possible explanation, the authors say,
is that these countries face higher rates of exposure to the chemicals,
possibly because they are undergoing a boom in plastic production but with
fewer manufacturing restrictions than other regions.
“There is a clear disparity in which
parts of the world bear the brunt of heightened heart risks from phthalates,”
said study senior author Leonardo Trasande, MD,
MPP. “Our results underscore the urgent
need for global regulations to reduce exposure to these toxins, especially in
areas most affected by rapid industrialization and plastic consumption,” added
Dr. Trasande, the Jim G. Hendrick, MD, Professor of Pediatrics at NYU Grossman School of Medicine.
Dr. Trasande, who is also a professor in
the Department of
Population Health, cautions that
the analysis was not designed to establish that DEHP directly or alone caused
heart disease and that higher death risks did not take into account other types
of phthalates. Nor did it include mortality among those in other age groups. As
a result, the overall death toll from heart disease connected to these
chemicals is likely much higher, he says.
Dr. Trasande says that the researchers
next plan to track how reductions in phthalate exposure may, over time, affect
global mortality rates, as well as to expand the study to other health concerns
posed by the chemicals, such as preterm birth. Dr. Trasande also serves as
director of NYU Grossman School of Medicine’s Division of
Environmental Pediatrics and
the Center for the
Investigation of Environmental Hazards.
Source: https://nyulangone.org/news/heart-disease-deaths-worldwide-linked-chemical-widely-used-plastics
Source: Heart Disease Deaths Worldwide Linked to Chemical Widely Used in Plastics – Scents of Science

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