Wednesday, April 1, 2026
PFAS mixture exposure shows positive association with serum total IgE levels in Korean adults
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PFAS mixture exposure shows positive association with serum total IgE levels in Korean adults

Key Takeaway
Interpret cross-sectional PFAS-IgE association cautiously; design precludes causal inference.

This cross-sectional analysis used data from 2,987 Korean adults participating in the Korean National Environmental Health Survey cycle 4 (2018–2020). It examined the relationship between concurrent exposure to a mixture of five perfluoroalkyl substance (PFAS) congeners and serum total immunoglobulin E (IgE) levels. No comparator group was explicitly reported in the input data.

The analysis found a statistically significant positive association between the overall PFAS mixture and total IgE levels (β = 0.033, p = 0.026). Perfluorodecanoic acid (PFDeA) was identified as the major contributor within the mixture, exhibiting a J-shaped, non-linear dose-response relationship with IgE levels (Pnon-linear < 0.001). The study also reported a significant interaction between PFAS exposure and smoking status (p < 0.05), though the specific direction of this interaction was not detailed.

Safety and tolerability data for PFAS exposure were not reported in the provided information. The primary limitation is the cross-sectional study design, which captures exposure and outcome at a single time point and cannot determine temporal sequence or establish causality. The findings represent an association, not evidence of causation. Funding sources and potential conflicts of interest were not reported. The practice relevance of these findings for clinicians is not specified, but they contribute to the observational evidence base on environmental chemical exposures and immune markers.

View Original Abstract ↓
The potential immunotoxicity of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) is a growing public health concern, yet epidemiological evidence in adults remains inconsistent. This inconsistency may partly stem from relying on single-pollutant models that do not fully capture the dynamics of chemical mixtures. We investigated the association between concurrent exposure to a mixture of five PFAS congeners and serum total immunoglobulin E (IgE) levels in a representative sample of 2,987 Korean adults from the 4th Korean National Environmental Health Survey (2018-2020). We employed Weighted Quantile Sum (WQS) regression, Quantile g-computation (Qgcomp), and Restricted Cubic Spline (RCS) analysis to assess mixture effects and non-linear associations. A statistically significant positive association was identified between the overall PFAS mixture and total IgE levels (β = 0.033, p = 0.026), with perfluorodecanoic acid (PFDeA) being the major contributor. RCS analysis revealed a distinct J-shaped, non-linear dose-response relationship between PFDeA and IgE (Pnon-linear < 0.001). Furthermore, a significant interaction with smoking status was identified (p  Exposure to long-chain PFAS mixtures is positively associated with atopic tendencies in adults. These findings highlight the importance of mixture modeling and lifestyle stratification in environmental epidemiology.