Publications by authors named "Ming-Kei Chung"

Pregnant women are physiologically prone to glucose intolerance, while the puerperium represents a critical phase for recovery. However, how air pollution disrupts glucose homeostasis during the gestational and early postpartum periods remains unclear. This prospective cohort study conducted an oral glucose tolerance test and measured the insulin levels of 834 pregnant women in Guangzhou, with a follow-up for 443 puerperae at 6-8 weeks postpartum.

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Background: Polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) have been shown to protect against fine particulate matter in aerodynamic diameter ()-induced hazards. However, limited evidence is available for respiratory health, particularly in pregnant women and their offspring.

Objectives: We aimed to investigate the association of prenatal exposure to and its chemical components with allergic rhinitis (AR) in children and explore effect modification by maternal erythrocyte PUFAs.

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This paper explores the exposome concept and its role in elucidating the interplay between environmental exposures and human health. We introduce two key concepts critical for exposomics research. Firstly, we discuss the joint impact of genetics and environment on phenotypes, emphasizing the variance attributable to shared and nonshared environmental factors, underscoring the complexity of quantifying the exposome's influence on health outcomes.

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Background: The correlates responsible for the temporal changes of intrahousehold SARS-CoV-2 transmission in the United States have been understudied mainly due to a lack of available surveillance data. Specifically, early analyses of SARS-CoV-2 household secondary attack rates (SARs) were small in sample size and conducted cross-sectionally at single time points. From these limited data, it has been difficult to assess the role that different risk factors have had on intrahousehold disease transmission in different stages of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, particularly in children and youth.

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Background: Post-treatment Lyme disease syndrome (PTLDS) is used to describe Lyme disease patients who have the infection cleared by antibiotic but then experienced persisting symptoms of pain, fatigue, or cognitive impairment. Currently, little is known about the cause or epidemiology of PTLDS.

Methods: We conducted a data-driven study with a large nationwide administrative dataset, which consists of more than 98 billion billing and 1.

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Background: Predisposition to become HIV positive (HIV + ) is influenced by a wide range of correlated economic, environmental, demographic, social, and behavioral factors. While evidence among a candidate handful have strong evidence, there is lack of a consensus among the vast array of variables measured in large surveys.

Methods: We performed a comprehensive data-driven search for correlates of HIV positivity in >600,000 participants of the Demographic and Health Survey across 29 sub-Saharan African countries from 2003 to 2017.

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Prevalence of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) has been increasing in the United States in the past decades. The exact mechanisms remain enigmatic, and diagnosis of the disease still relies primarily on assessment of behavior. We first used a case-control design (75 idiopathic cases and 29 controls, enrolled at Boston Children's Hospital from 2007-2012) to identify plasma biomarkers of ASD through a metabolome-wide association study approach.

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Background: Mortality risk stratification based on dichotomising a physiological indicator with a cutoff point might not adequately capture increased mortality risk and might not account for non-linear associations. We aimed to characterise the linear and non-linear relationships of 27 physiological indicators with all-cause mortality to evaluate whether the current clinical thresholds are suitable in distinguishing patients at high risk for mortality from those at low risk.

Methods: For this observational cohort study of the US non-institutionalised population, we used data from adults (≥18 years) included in the 1999-2014 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) linked with National Death Index mortality data collected from Jan 1, 1999, up until Dec 31, 2015.

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Background: Recent developments in technologies have offered opportunities to measure the exposome with unprecedented accuracy and scale. However, because most investigations have targeted only a few exposures at a time, it is hypothesized that the majority of the environmental determinants of chronic diseases remain unknown.

Objectives: We describe a functional exposome concept and explain how it can leverage existing bioassays and high-resolution mass spectrometry for exploratory study.

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Objective: Prior studies examining diabetes prevalence in India have found that nearly 50% of the diabetes population remains undiagnosed; however, the specific populations at risk are unclear.

Research Design And Methods: First, we estimated the prevalence of undiagnosed diabetes in India for 750 924 persons between the ages of 15 years and 50 years who participated in the National Family Health Survey (NFHS-4)/Demographic Health Survey (2015-2016), a cross-sectional survey of all 29 states and 7 union territories of India. We defined 'undiagnosed diabetes' as individuals who did not know about their diabetes status but had high random (≥200 mg/dL) or fasting (≥126 mg/dL) blood glucose levels.

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Objectives: Exposome-wide association studies (EWAS) are a systematic and unbiased way to investigate multiple environmental factors associated with phenotype. We applied EWAS to study semen quality and queried the sample size requirements to detect modest associations in a reproductive cohort.

Study Design And Setting: We conducted 1) a multivariate EWAS of 128 endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs) from 15 chemical classes measured in urine/serum relative to 7 semen quality endpoints in a prospective cohort study comprising 473 men and 2) estimated the sample size requirements for EWAS etiologic investigations.

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Many factors affect the variation in the exposome. We examined the influence of shared household and partner's sex in relation to the variation in 128 endocrine disrupting chemical (EDC) exposures among couples. In a cohort comprising of 501 couples trying for pregnancy, we measured 128 (13 chemical classes) persistent and nonpersistent EDCs and estimated 1) sex-specific differences; 2) variance explained by shared household; and 3) Spearman's rank correlation coefficients ( r) for females, males, and couples' exposures.

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Background: More than 90% of the world's population lives in areas where outdoor air pollution levels exceed health-based limits. In these areas, individuals may use indoor air filtration, often on a sporadic basis, in their residences to reduce exposure to respirable particles (PM). Whether this intervention can lead to improvements in health outcomes has not been evaluated.

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No previous studies have simultaneously measured the biomarkers of environmental exposure and metabolome perturbation in residents affected by industrial pollutants. This study aimed to investigate the metabolic effects of environmental pollutants such as vanadium and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) on residents in the vicinity of a petrochemical complex. The study subjects were 160 residents, including 80 high-exposure subjects exposed to high levels of vanadium and PAHs and 80 age- and gender-matched low-exposure subjects living within a 40-km radius of a petrochemical complex.

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Untargeted analyses of tryptic peptides of human serum albumin (HSA) have been used to investigate unknown exposures to reactive electrophiles (adductomics). To reduce the complexity of the analytical matrix and thereby enhance identification of adducts by liquid chromatography-high-resolution mass spectrometry (LC-HRMS), a polyclonal anti-T3 antibody was designed to capture Cys34 adducts in tryptic digests of HSA (T3 is the third largest tryptic peptide). Epitopes were selected from sequences at both C- and N-termini based on the three-dimensional structure of the T3 peptide to minimize the influence of modified Cys34 residues.

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Exposure to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons has often been quantified via DNA or human serum albumin (HSA) adducts of the carcinogenic metabolite benzo[a]pyrene diol epoxide (BPDE). We previously reported a sandwich ELISA, using 8E11 as capture antibody and anti-HSA as detection antibody, that detected intact BPDE adducts in HSA isolated from plasma. After confirming that BPDE binds to HSA at His146 and Lys195, we modified the ELISA to measure intact BPDE-HSA directly in human plasma.

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Adducts of benzo[a]pyrene-diolepoxide (BPDE) with blood nucleophiles have been used as biomarkers of exposure to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs). The most popular such assay is a competitive enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) that employs monoclonal antibody 8E11 to detect benzo[a]pyrene tetrols following hydrolysis of BPDE adducts from lymphocyte DNA or human serum albumin (HSA). Here we used 8E11 as the capture antibody in a sandwich ELISA to detect BPDE-HSA adducts directly in 1-mg samples of HSA or 20 microl of serum/plasma.

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