Exposome-wide associations and polyexposure risks of workplace chemical exposures on adult asthma: The Personalized Environment and Genes Study (PEGS). Journal Abstract - Guideline Central

Exposome-wide associations and polyexposure risks of workplace chemical exposures on adult asthma: The Personalized Environment and Genes Study (PEGS).

Published: 2025 Dec 15

Authors

, , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Abstract

Many potential occupational asthmagens remain unrecognized, and their co-exposure risks are underestimated. We conducted an exposome-wide association study (ExWAS) to systematically explore occupational chemical exposures and estimate their joint association with asthma outcomes using polyexposure risk scores (PXS). This North Carolina-based cross-sectional study included 3148 adults. Standardized questionnaires assessed occupational exposure to 93 chemical agents across 18 classes (>15 min/week, ever or never) and personal protective equipment (PPE) use. Current adult asthma was defined as self-reported doctor-diagnosed asthma with recent attacks. Respiratory multimorbidity was ascertained if asthma coexists with allergic rhinitis or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Logistic regression-based ExWAS analyzed associations for individual chemicals. Weighted standardized PXS were developed for predefined known asthmagens (PXS ) and suspected or novel risk agents (PXS ) selected from ExWAS through LASSO regularization. Ever exposure to classes of cleaning liquids, heavy metals, dust, and combustion emissions was positively associated with asthma [adjusted odds ratio (aOR): 1.50-2.10; false discovery rate<0.05], with findings on mineral dust replicated using an independent NHANES dataset. The top individual risk agents were talc, ammonia, bleach, silica, and carbon monoxide. PXS (four agents) and PXS (six agents) showed positive associations with asthma and multimorbidity (aOR: 1.22-1.94 per 0.1 increments). Participants using PPE had reduced asthma odds in relation to PXS (P< 0.05). This study identified six suspected and novel chemical risk agents not yet recognized as occupational asthmagens by major classification systems. The findings enhance understanding of chemical-induced asthma risks and highlight the potential impact of combined exposures in occupational settings.

Keywords: Adults, Asthma, Chemical agents, Exposome, Occupation, Polyexposure risk scores

Source

Environmental research

Publication Type

Journal Article

Language

English

PubMed ID

41101673

MeSH terms

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