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Microplastic changes during the development of cervical cancer and its effects on the metabolomic profiles of cancer tissues

Journal of Hazardous Materials 2024 20 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 65 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Hongwen Xu, Hongwen Xu, Chunlin Dong, Tongyue Xiang, Tongyue Xiang, Hongwen Xu, Tongyue Xiang, Hongwen Xu, Hongwen Xu, Hongwen Xu, Chunlin Dong, Chunlin Dong, Hongwen Xu, Tongyue Xiang, Hongwen Xu, Hongwen Xu, Hongwen Xu, Chunlin Dong, Chunlin Dong, Chunlin Dong, Chunlin Dong, Zhilong Yu, Hongwen Xu, Jinjin Yu, Chunlin Dong, Zhilong Yu, Tongyue Xiang, Tongyue Xiang, Zhilong Yu, Tongyue Xiang, Hongwen Xu, Tongyue Xiang, Chunlin Dong, Zhilong Yu, Xingchao Shentu, Xingchao Shentu, Ding Ma, Yunfei Xie Yunfei Xie Yunfei Xie Zhilong Yu, Yunfei Xie Yunfei Xie Yunfei Xie Zhilong Yu, Zhilong Yu, Zhilong Yu, Jinjin Yu, Zhilong Yu, Yunfei Xie Yunfei Xie Jinjin Yu, Yunfei Xie Xu Jiang, Yunfei Xie Yunfei Xie Yunfei Xie Zhilong Yu, Zhilong Yu, Jinjin Yu, Zhilong Yu, Yunfei Xie Jinjin Yu, Ding Ma, Ding Ma, Jinjin Yu, Jinjin Yu, Yunfei Xie Jinjin Yu, Yunfei Xie Yunfei Xie Yunfei Xie Yunfei Xie Yunfei Xie Yunfei Xie Yunfei Xie

Summary

Researchers found microplastics in cervical cancer tissue, with polyethylene and polypropylene being the most common types, and levels increased as the cancer progressed to more advanced stages. The microplastics appeared to alter the chemical environment within the cancer tissue, suggesting they may play a role in how cervical cancer develops, though more research is needed to confirm a causal link.

Polymers
Body Systems
Models

Recent studies have detected microplastics (MPs) in reproductive organs and found that they exert toxic effects on the reproductive system. However, the exact mechanism of action remains unclear. This study evaluates changes in MP levels in patients with cervical cancer as the disease progresses and uses untargeted metabolomics to assess the impact of MP exposure on the metabolomic profiles of cervical invasive cancer tissues. A total of 12 MP types were identified in 101 MP particles, with an average abundance of 2.24 ± 1.61 MP particles/g. Of these, polyethylene (PE, 26.73 %) and polypropylene (PP, 19.80 %) were the most frequently detected. Also, some MPs were observed to have sizes smaller than 20 µm. Notably, MP exposure levels increase as cervical cancer progresses (p < 0.05). Metabolomics analysis revealed that, among the 33 biologically significant metabolites screened, D-Mannose and cis,cis-muconic acid showed the most significant differences. Additionally, the aminosugar and nucleotide sugar metabolism pathways were the most significantly enriched in this experiment, potentially acting as pathways through which MPs may contribute to the pathogenesis of cervical cancer. The metabolites and pathways identified in this study may offer new insights and opportunities for disease research in patients with cervical cancer.

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