Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Association between the pregnancy exposome and fetal growth

2020; Oxford University Press; Volume: 49; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1093/ije/dyaa017

ISSN

1464-3685

Autores

Lydiane Agier, Xavier Basagaña, Carles Hernández-Ferrer, Léa Maitre, Ibón Tamayo, José Urquiza, Sandra Andrušaitytė, Maribel Casas, Montserrat de Castro, Enrique Cequier, Leda Chatzi, David Donaire-González, Lise Giorgis-Allemand, Juan R. González, Regina Gražulevičienė, Kristine B. Gützkow, Line Småstuen Haug, Amrit K. Sakhi, Rosemary McEachan, Helle Margrete Meltzer, Mark Nieuwenhuijsen, Oliver Robinson, Theano Roumeliotaki, Jordi Sunyer, Cathrine Thomsen, Marina Vafeiadi, Antònia Valentín, Jane West, John Wright, Valérie Siroux, Martine Vrijheid, Rémy Slama,

Tópico(s)

Air Quality and Health Impacts

Resumo

Several environmental contaminants were shown to possibly influence fetal growth, generally from single exposure family studies, which are prone to publication bias and confounding by co-exposures. The exposome paradigm offers perspectives to avoid selective reporting of findings and to control for confounding by co-exposures. We aimed to characterize associations of fetal growth with the pregnancy chemical and external exposomes.Within the Human Early-Life Exposome project, 131 prenatal exposures were assessed using biomarkers and environmental models in 1287 mother-child pairs from six European cohorts. We investigated their associations with fetal growth using a deletion-substitution-addition (DSA) algorithm considering all exposures simultaneously, and an exposome-wide association study (ExWAS) considering each exposure independently. We corrected for exposure measurement error and tested for exposure-exposure and sex-exposure interactions.The DSA model identified lead blood level, which was associated with a 97 g birth weight decrease for each doubling in lead concentration. No exposure passed the multiple testing-corrected significance threshold of ExWAS; without multiple testing correction, this model was in favour of negative associations of lead, fine particulate matter concentration and absorbance with birth weight, and of a positive sex-specific association of parabens with birth weight in boys. No two-way interaction between exposure variables was identified.This first large-scale exposome study of fetal growth simultaneously considered >100 environmental exposures. Compared with single exposure studies, our approach allowed making all tests (usually reported in successive publications) explicit. Lead exposure is still a health concern in Europe and parabens health effects warrant further investigation.

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