Environmental Planning and Non-Communicable Diseases: A Systematic Review on the Role of the Metabolomic Profile

Author:

Oliveira Natália Cristina de1ORCID,Balikian Júnior Pedro2,Júnior Arnaldo Tenório da Cunha3,Bento Edson de Souza4,Tonholo Josealdo4,Aquino Thiago4,Sousa Filipe Antonio de Barros2,Araujo Gustavo Gomes de2,Ferreira Maurício Lamano5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Nursing and Health, Guarulhos University, Central Campus, Guarulhos 07023-070, SP, Brazil

2. Institute of Physical Education and Sport (IEFE), Federal University of Alagoas, Campus AC Simões, Maceió 57072-900, AL, Brazil

3. Kineanthropometry, Physical Activity and Health Promotion Laboratory (LACAPS), Physical Education Department, Federal University of Alagoas, Campus Arapiraca, Arapiraca 57309-005, AL, Brazil

4. Institute of Chemistry and Biotechnology (IQB), Federal University of Alagoas, Campus AC Simões, Maceió 57072-900, AL, Brazil

5. Department of Geoenvironmental Analysis, Guarulhos University, Central Campus, Guarulhos 07023-070, SP, Brazil

Abstract

Non-communicable diseases (NCDs) are the major cause of death worldwide and have economic, psychological, and social impacts. Air pollution is the second, contributing to NCDs-related deaths. Metabolomics are a useful diagnostic and prognostic tool for NCDs, as they allow the identification of biomarkers linked to emerging pathologic processes. The aim of the present study was to review the scientific literature on the application of metabolomics profiling in NCDs and to discuss environmental planning actions to assist healthcare systems and public managers based on early metabolic diagnosis. The search was conducted following PRISMA guidelines using Web of Science, Scopus, and PubMed databases with the following MeSH terms: “metabolomics” AND “noncommunicable diseases” AND “air pollution”. Twenty-nine studies were eligible. Eleven involved NCDs prevention, eight addressed diabetes mellitus, insulin resistance, systemic arterial hypertension, or metabolic syndrome. Six studies focused on obesity, two evaluated nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, two studied cancer, and none addressed chronic respiratory diseases. The studies provided insights into the biological pathways associated with NCDs. Understanding the cost of delivering care where there will be a critical increase in NCDs prevalence is crucial to achieving universal health coverage and improving population health by allocating environmental planning and treatment resources.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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