The relationship between mixed exposure to blood metal and serum neurofilament light chain levels in the general U.S. population: an unsupervised clustering approach
Jiyu Nie, Lin Wen, Zhentian Lai, Chuhang Lin, Haiyin Li, Jing Zhang, Shen Xie, Xiaosong Ben, Chunxia Jing

TL;DR
This study finds that higher blood cadmium levels are linked to increased signs of neuronal injury in the general U.S. population.
Contribution
A novel unsupervised clustering approach is used to explore mixed metal exposure and its association with a neuronal injury biomarker.
Findings
Blood cadmium levels are significantly associated with elevated serum neurofilament light chain (sNfL) levels.
Cadmium is identified as the dominant contributor to sNfL elevation in high-exposure subgroups.
The effect of cadmium on sNfL is stronger in males and individuals with higher BMI.
Abstract
Serum neurofilament light chain (sNfL) has demonstrate significant clinical value in quantifying neuronal injury. Concurrently, extensive evidence has linked metal exposure to neurotoxic effects. However, the potential association between metal exposure and circulating sNfL levels remains uninvestigated in population-based study. We applied a novel unsupervised clustering method (k-medoids) incorporating blood metals concentrations to stratify the general U. S. population into different exposure profiles to investigate the association between metal exposure and sNfL levels. We analyzed data from the 2013–2014 NHANES cycle, and 513 participants were included in this study. Multivariate regression model, Bayesian kernel regression (BKMR) and quantile g-computation (QGC) were used to assess the relationship between individual and mixed metal exposure and sNfL. Multivariate regression…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHeavy Metal Exposure and Toxicity · Trace Elements in Health · Aluminum toxicity and tolerance in plants and animals
