Hansen Craig A, Barnett Adrian G, Jalaludin Bin B, Morgan Geoffrey G
National Center for Environmental Assessment, US Environmental Protection Agency, Durham, North Carolina, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2009;4(4):e5408. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0005408. Epub 2009 Apr 30.
Birth defects are a major public health concern as they are the leading cause of neonatal and infant mortality. Observational studies have linked environmental pollution to adverse birth outcomes, including congenital anomalies. This study examined potential associations between ambient air pollution and congenital heart defects and cleft lip or palate among births in Brisbane, Australia (1998-2004).
Ambient air pollution levels were averaged over weeks 3-8 of pregnancy among 150,308 births. Using a case-control design, we used conditional logistic regression and matched cases to 5 controls. Analyses were conducted using all births, and then births where the mother resided within 6 and 12 kilometers of an ambient air quality monitor.
When analyzing all births there was no indication that ambient air pollution in Brisbane was associated with a higher risk of cardiac defects. Among births where the mother resided within 6 kilometers of an ambient air quality monitor, a 5 ppb increase in O(3) was associated with an increased risk of pulmonary artery and valve defects (OR 2.96, 95% CI: 1.34, 7.52) while a 0.6 ppb increase in SO(2) was associated with an increased risk of aortic artery and valve defects (OR 10.76, 95% CI: 1.50, 179.8). For oral cleft defects among all births, the only adverse association was between SO(2) and cleft lip with or without cleft palate (OR 1.27, 95% CI: 1.01, 1.62). However, various significant inverse associations were also found between air pollutants and birth defects.
This study found mixed results and it is difficult to conclude whether ambient air pollution in Brisbane has an adverse association with the birth defects examined. Studies using more detailed estimates of air pollution exposure are needed.
出生缺陷是一个重大的公共卫生问题,因为它们是新生儿和婴儿死亡的主要原因。观察性研究已将环境污染与不良出生结局联系起来,包括先天性异常。本研究调查了澳大利亚布里斯班(1998 - 2004年)出生人群中环境空气污染与先天性心脏病、唇腭裂之间的潜在关联。
对150308例出生病例在妊娠第3至8周期间的环境空气污染水平进行了平均。采用病例对照设计,我们使用条件逻辑回归,并将病例与5名对照进行匹配。分析使用了所有出生病例,然后是母亲居住在环境空气质量监测器6公里和12公里范围内的出生病例。
在分析所有出生病例时,没有迹象表明布里斯班的环境空气污染与心脏缺陷风险增加有关。在母亲居住在环境空气质量监测器6公里范围内的出生病例中,臭氧(O₃)每增加5 ppb与肺动脉和瓣膜缺陷风险增加相关(比值比2.96,95%置信区间:1.34,7.52),而二氧化硫(SO₂)每增加0.6 ppb与主动脉和瓣膜缺陷风险增加相关(比值比10.76,95%置信区间:1.50,179.8)。对于所有出生病例中的口腔腭裂缺陷,唯一的不良关联是二氧化硫与唇裂伴或不伴腭裂之间(比值比1.27,95%置信区间:1.01,1.62)。然而,在空气污染物与出生缺陷之间也发现了各种显著的负相关。
本研究结果不一,难以得出布里斯班的环境空气污染与所研究的出生缺陷之间是否存在不良关联的结论。需要使用更详细的空气污染暴露估计的研究。