Gilliland Frank, Avol Ed, Kinney Patrick, Jerrett Michael, Dvonch Timothy, Lurmann Frederick, Buckley Timothy, Breysse Patrick, Keeler Gerald, de Villiers Tracy, McConnell Rob
Department of Preventive Medicine, Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California, USA.
Environ Health Perspect. 2005 Oct;113(10):1447-54. doi: 10.1289/ehp.7673.
The National Children's Study is considering a wide spectrum of airborne pollutants that are hypothesized to potentially influence pregnancy outcomes, neurodevelopment, asthma, atopy, immune development, obesity, and pubertal development. In this article we summarize six applicable exposure assessment lessons learned from the Centers for Children's Environmental Health and Disease Prevention Research that may enhance the National Children's Study: a) Selecting individual study subjects with a wide range of pollution exposure profiles maximizes spatial-scale exposure contrasts for key pollutants of study interest. b) In studies with large sample sizes, long duration, and diverse outcomes and exposures, exposure assessment efforts should rely on modeling to provide estimates for the entire cohort, supported by subject-derived questionnaire data. c) Assessment of some exposures of interest requires individual measurements of exposures using snapshots of personal and microenvironmental exposures over short periods and/or in selected microenvironments. d) Understanding issues of spatial-temporal correlations of air pollutants, the surrogacy of specific pollutants for components of the complex mixture, and the exposure misclassification inherent in exposure estimates is critical in analysis and interpretation. e) "Usual" temporal, spatial, and physical patterns of activity can be used as modifiers of the exposure/outcome relationships. f) Biomarkers of exposure are useful for evaluation of specific exposures that have multiple routes of exposure. If these lessons are applied, the National Children's Study offers a unique opportunity to assess the adverse effects of air pollution on interrelated health outcomes during the critical early life period.
国家儿童研究正在考虑一系列空气传播污染物,据推测这些污染物可能会对妊娠结局、神经发育、哮喘、特应性、免疫发育、肥胖和青春期发育产生潜在影响。在本文中,我们总结了从儿童环境卫生与疾病预防研究中心学到的六个适用的暴露评估经验教训,这些经验教训可能会增强国家儿童研究:a)选择具有广泛污染暴露特征的个体研究对象,可使研究关注的关键污染物的空间尺度暴露对比最大化。b)在样本量大、持续时间长、结局和暴露多样的研究中,暴露评估工作应依靠模型为整个队列提供估计值,并辅以源自研究对象的问卷数据。c)对某些感兴趣的暴露进行评估需要使用短期和/或选定微环境中的个人和微环境暴露快照对暴露进行个体测量。d)了解空气污染物的时空相关性问题、特定污染物对复杂混合物成分的替代作用以及暴露估计中固有的暴露错误分类在分析和解释中至关重要。e)“通常”的活动时间、空间和物理模式可作为暴露/结局关系的调节因素。f)暴露生物标志物有助于评估具有多种暴露途径的特定暴露。如果应用这些经验教训,国家儿童研究提供了一个独特的机会来评估空气污染在关键的生命早期阶段对相互关联的健康结局的不利影响。