Perera Frederica P, Tang Deliang, Rauh Virginia, Lester Kristin, Tsai Wei Yann, Tu Yi Hsuan, Weiss Lisa, Hoepner Lori, King Jeffrey, Del Priore Giuseppe, Lederman Sally Ann
Columbia Center for Children's Environmental Health, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, New York, New York 10032, USA.
Environ Health Perspect. 2005 Aug;113(8):1062-7. doi: 10.1289/ehp.7908.
Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) are toxic pollutants released by the World Trade Center (WTC) fires and various urban combustion sources. Benzo[a]pyrene (BaP) is a representative member of the class of PAHs. PAH-DNA adducts, or BaP-DNA adducts as their proxy, provide a measure of chemical-specific genetic damage that has been associated with increased risk of adverse birth outcomes and cancer. To learn whether PAHs from the WTC disaster increased levels of genetic damage in pregnant women and their newborns, we analyzed BaP-DNA adducts in maternal (n = 170) and umbilical cord blood (n = 203) obtained at delivery from nonsmoking women who were pregnant on 11 September 2001 and were enrolled at delivery at three downtown Manhattan hospitals. The mean adduct levels in cord and maternal blood were highest among newborns and mothers who resided within 1 mi of the WTC site during the month after 11 September, intermediate among those who worked but did not live within this area, and lowest in those who neither worked nor lived within 1 mi (reference group). Among newborns of mothers living within 1 mi of the WTC site during this period, levels of cord blood adducts were inversely correlated with linear distance from the WTC site (p = 0.02). To learn whether PAHs from the WTC disaster may have affected birth outcomes, we analyzed the relationship between these outcomes and DNA adducts in umbilical cord blood, excluding preterm births to reduce variability. There were no independent fetal growth effects of either PAH-DNA adducts or environmental tobacco smoke (ETS), but adducts in combination with in utero exposure to ETS were associated with decreased fetal growth. Specifically, a doubling of adducts among ETS-exposed subjects corresponded to an estimated average 276-g (8%) reduction in birth weight (p = 0.03) and a 1.3-cm (3%) reduction in head circumference (p = 0.04). The findings suggest that exposure to elevated levels of PAHs, indicated by PAH-DNA adducts in cord blood, may have contributed to reduced fetal growth in women exposed to the WTC event.
多环芳烃(PAHs)是由世贸中心(WTC)火灾及各种城市燃烧源释放的有毒污染物。苯并[a]芘(BaP)是多环芳烃类的代表性成员。PAH-DNA加合物,或作为其替代物的BaP-DNA加合物,提供了一种化学特异性遗传损伤的衡量指标,这种损伤与不良出生结局和癌症风险增加有关。为了了解世贸中心灾难产生的多环芳烃是否会增加孕妇及其新生儿的遗传损伤水平,我们分析了2001年9月11日怀孕、在曼哈顿市中心三家医院分娩时登记入组的非吸烟女性在分娩时获得的母血(n = 170)和脐带血(n = 203)中的BaP-DNA加合物。9月11日后一个月内居住在世贸中心遗址1英里范围内的新生儿和母亲,其脐带血和母血中的平均加合物水平最高;在该区域工作但不住在该区域的人,加合物水平处于中等;既不在该区域工作也不住在1英里范围内的人(参照组),加合物水平最低。在此期间居住在世贸中心遗址1英里范围内的母亲所生新生儿中,脐带血加合物水平与距世贸中心遗址线性距离呈负相关(p = 0.02)。为了了解世贸中心灾难产生的多环芳烃是否可能影响出生结局,我们分析了这些结局与脐带血中DNA加合物之间的关系,排除早产以减少变异性。多环芳烃-DNA加合物或环境烟草烟雾(ETS)对胎儿生长均无独立影响,但加合物与宫内接触ETS共同作用与胎儿生长减少有关。具体而言,ETS暴露组加合物水平翻倍对应出生体重估计平均降低276克(8%)(p = 0.03),头围降低1.3厘米(3%)(p = 0.04)。研究结果表明,脐带血中PAH-DNA加合物表明的多环芳烃暴露水平升高,可能导致了接触世贸中心事件的女性胎儿生长受限。