Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety (Mar 2024)

Exposure to heavy metal elements may significantly increase serum prostate-specific antigen levels with overdosed dietary zinc

  • Yinyi Fang,
  • Chi Chen,
  • Xiaoyue Chen,
  • Jukun Song,
  • Shuangshuang Feng,
  • Zhuang Li,
  • Zhengnan Li,
  • Yuliang Xiong,
  • Qinyi Zhang,
  • Hao Su,
  • Heng Liu,
  • Guohua Zhu,
  • Bin Hu,
  • Wei Wang,
  • Zhangcheng Liu,
  • Ke Jiao,
  • Chang Zhang,
  • Fan Zhang,
  • Kehua Jiang,
  • Jun He,
  • Zhaolin Sun,
  • Dongbo Yuan,
  • Weiming Chen,
  • Jianguo Zhu

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 272
p. 116080

Abstract

Read online

Background: Serum prostate-specific antigen (PSA) is a primary metric for diagnosis and prognosis of prostate cancer (PCa). Exposure to heavy metals, such as lead, cadmium, mercury, and zinc can impact PSA levels in PCa patients. However, it is unclear whether this effect also occurs in men without PCa, which may lead to the overdiagnosis of PCa. Method: Data on a total of 5089 American men who had never been diagnosed with PCa were obtained from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey performed from 2003–2010. The relationship between serum PSA levels (dependent variable) and concentrations of lead (μmol/L), cadmium (nmol/L), and mercury (μmol/L) were investigated with dietary zinc intake being used as a potential modifier or covariate in a weighted linear regression model and a generalized additive model. A series of bootstrapping analyses were performed to evaluate sensitivity and specificity using these models. Results: Regression analyses suggested that, in general, lead, cadmium, or mercury did not show an association with PSA levels, which was consistent with the results of the bootstrapping analyses. However, in a subgroup of participants with a high level of dietary zinc intake (≥14.12 mg/day), a significant positive association between cadmium and serum PSA was identified (1.06, 95% CI, P = 0.0268, P for interaction=0.0249). Conclusions: With high-level zinc intake, serum PSA levels may rise in PCa-free men as the exposure to cadmium increases, leading to a potential risk of an overdiagnosis of PCa and unnecessary treatment. Therefore, environmental variables should be factored in the current diagnostic model for PCa that is solely based on PSA measurements. Different criteria for PSA screening are necessary based on geographical variables. Further investigations are needed to uncover the biological and biochemical relationship between zinc, cadmium, and serum PSA levels to more precisely diagnose PCa.

Keywords