Abstract

Whilst certain environmental organochlorine pesticide exposure may still pose significant burden, the associations between dichloro-diphenyl-trichloroethane (DDT) and chronic kidney disease (CKD) remain disputable notwithstanding the potentially inaccurate disease definition between age groups. National DDT exposure burden atlas was depicted from 92,061 participants by measuring their serum concentrations of DDT congeners and major metabolite in the US from 1999 to 2016. Temporal analyses of these toxicant exposure suggested that although serum DDT concentrations exhibited recent decline, the detection rates remain up to 99.8% every year, posing great concern for exposure risk. A total of 3,039 US adults were further included from these participants demonstrating the weighted CKD prevalence of 40.2% using the new age-adapted CKD-EPI40 model compared to 28.0% using the current CKD-EPI method. After adjustment for covariates, logistic regression model results showed individual metabolites and total DDT burden were positively, yet monotonically, associated with risk of CKD incidence (P-trend for all<0.05), particularly among adults 40years of age and older. Much heightened renal disease risk was also observed with high DDT exposure (OR, 1.55; 95% CI, 1.11-2.15) in those who were hypertensive (P for heterogeneity<0.001) but not with diabetes. The current high DDT exposure risk combined with elevated probability for CKD incidence call for health concerns and management for the environmentally persistent pollutants.

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