Columbia: Arsenic found in the environment may have some association with the
development of type 1 diabetes in youth under 18, according to
researchers at Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health.
They found that low plasma concentrations of Inorganicarsenic compared
with other forms of arsenic were associated with both a higher odds and a
higher prevalence of type 1 diabetes. Although studies have connected
arsenic and diabetes in adults, this is one of the first to look at
arsenic’s possible relationship with diabetes in children and teenagers.
The findings are published online in the journal Diabetes Care.
“We
found that arsenic metabolism characterized by the relative proportions
of inorganic arsenic and methylated arsenic species in plasma, was
associated with type 1 diabetes in children and adolescents who
participated in Diabetes in Youth Case Control (SEARCH-CC), a study
designed to assess risk factors in youth for diabetes type 1 and type
2,” said Maria Grau-Perez, MS, a biostatistician in the Department of
Environmental Health Sciences at the Mailman School, and first author.
Grau-Perez
and colleagues used biospecimens gathered from counties around
Columbia, South Carolina and Denver, Colorado as part of a larger SEARCH
for Diabetes in Youth Case Control study. They evaluated 688
participants under the age of 22; 429 with type 1 diabetes, 85 with type
2 diabetes, and 174 control participants.
According to Grau-Perez and senior author Ana Navas-Acien, MD, PhD, professor of Environmental Health Sciences,
arsenic was studied for several reasons. It may impair the immune
system, pre-natural exposure may alter the microbiome in early childhood
and increase the susceptibility to type 1 diabetes, and pancreatic
B-cells are targets in humans, animals and in vitro models for a variety
of types of arsenic.
Inorganic arsenic is a toxicant and
carcinogen that naturally occurs in groundwater and rice, grains and
some juices. Blood samples from youths living around Columbia and Denver
were used because they were more likely to be exposed to low levels of
inorganic arsenic in the drinking water compared to rural youths living
in other areas of the U.S., noted the authors.
The sample
included a smaller number of type 2 diabetes cases and, therefore, the
authors could not evaluate the association between arsenic and type 2
diabetes. The placebo-controlled study also looked at the interaction
between arsenic and folate and vitamin B-12. “In our analyses, the
association between methylated arsenic species and type 1 diabetes was
stronger for participants with higher folate levels,” said Navas-Acien.
“Our
findings provide novel evidence that links arsenic and diabetes in
youth and support the need for additional research,” the researchers
concluded.