Associations between paediatric obesity, chemical mixtures and environmental factors, in a national cross‐sectional study of Canadian children

Author:

Dugandzic Rose1,Konstantelos Natalia12ORCID,Yu Yamei13,Lavigne Eric34,Srugo Sebastian5,Lang Justin J.3567,Larsen Kristian18910,Pollock Tyler4,Villeneuve Paul11,Thomson Errol M.412,MacPherson Miranda1,Dales Robert41213,Cakmak Sabit4

Affiliation:

1. Office of Environmental Health Health Canada Ottawa Ontario Canada

2. Leslie Dan Faculty of Pharmacy University of Toronto Toronto Ontario Canada

3. School of Epidemiology and Public Health University of Ottawa Ottawa Ontario Canada

4. Environmental Health Science and Research Bureau Health Canada Ottawa Ontario Canada

5. Centre for Surveillance and Applied Research Public Health Agency of Canada Ottawa Ontario Canada

6. Alliance for Research in Exercise, Nutrition and Activity (ARENA) University of South Australia Adelaide South Australia Australia

7. Healthy Active Living and Obesity Research Group Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario Research Institute Ottawa Ontario Canada

8. Department of Public Health Sciences Queen's University Kingston Ontario Canada

9. Department of Geography and Planning University of Toronto Toronto Ontario Canada

10. Department of Geography and Environmental Studies Toronto Metropolitan University Toronto Ontario Canada

11. School of Mathematics and Statistics Carleton University Ottawa Ontario Canada

12. Department of Biochemistry, Microbiology and Immunology, Faculty of Medicine University of Ottawa Ottawa Ontario Canada

13. Ottawa Hospital Research Institute University of Ottawa Ottawa Ontario Canada

Abstract

SummaryBackgroundWhilst single chemical exposures are suspected to be obesogenic, the combined role of chemical mixtures in paediatric obesity is not well understood.ObjectivesWe aimed to evaluate the potential associations between chemical mixtures and obesity in a population‐based sample of Canadian children.MethodsWe ascertained biomonitoring and health data for children aged 3–11 from the cross‐sectional Canadian Health Measures Survey from 2007 to 2019. Several chemicals of interest were measured in blood or urine and paediatric obesity was defined based on measured anthropometrics. Using quantile‐based G computational analysis, we quantified the effects of three chemical mixtures selected a priori. Models were adjusted for sociodemographic and environmental factors identified through a directed acyclic graph. Results are presented through adjusted relative risks (RR) with 95% confidence intervals (95% CI).ResultsWe included 9147 children. Of these, 24.1% were overweight or obese. Exposure to the mixture of bisphenol A, acrylamide, glycidamide, metals, parabens and arsenic increased the risk of childhood overweight or obesity by 45% (95% CI 1.09, 1.93), obesity by 109% (95% CI 1.27, 3.42) and central obesity by 82% (95% CI 1.30, 2.56).ConclusionsOur findings support the role of early childhood chemical exposures in paediatric obesity and the potential combined effects of chemicals.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference97 articles.

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2. Worldwide trends in childhood overweight and obesity

3. World Health Organization.Obesity and overweight [Internet].2021https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/obesity-and-overweight

4. Long-term effects of adolescent obesity: time to act

5. Psychological consequences of childhood obesity: psychiatric comorbidity and prevention

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