Braun Joseph M, Lanphear Bruce P, Calafat Antonia M, Deria Sirad, Khoury Jane, Howe Chanelle J, Venners Scott A
Department of Epidemiology, Brown University School of Public Health, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, USA.
Environ Health Perspect. 2014 Nov;122(11):1239-45. doi: 10.1289/ehp.1408258. Epub 2014 Jul 29.
Early-life exposure to bisphenol A (BPA) may increase childhood obesity risk, but few prospective epidemiological studies have investigated this relationship.
We sought to determine whether early-life exposure to BPA was associated with increased body mass index (BMI) at 2-5 years of age in 297 mother-child pairs from Cincinnati, Ohio (HOME Study).
Urinary BPA concentrations were measured in samples collected from pregnant women during the second and third trimesters and their children at 1 and 2 years of age. BMI z-scores were calculated from weight/height measures conducted annually from 2 through 5 years of age. We used linear mixed models to estimate BMI differences or trajectories with increasing creatinine-normalized BPA concentrations.
After confounder adjustment, each 10-fold increase in prenatal (β = -0.1; 95% CI: -0.5, 0.3) or early-childhood (β = -0.2; 95% CI: -0.6, 0.1) BPA concentrations was associated with a modest and nonsignificant reduction in child BMI. These inverse associations were suggestively stronger in girls than in boys [prenatal effect measure modification (EMM) p-value = 0.30, early-childhood EMM p-value = 0.05], but sex-specific associations were imprecise. Children in the highest early-childhood BPA tercile had lower BMI at 2 years (difference = -0.3; 95% CI: -0.6, 0.0) and larger increases in their BMI slope from 2 through 5 years (BMI increase per year = 0.12; 95% CI: 0.07, 0.18) than children in the lowest tercile (BMI increase per year = 0.07; 95% CI: 0.01, 0.13). All associations were attenuated without creatinine normalization.
Prenatal and early-childhood BPA exposures were not associated with increased BMI at 2-5 years of age, but higher early-childhood BPA exposures were associated with accelerated growth during this period.
早年暴露于双酚A(BPA)可能会增加儿童肥胖风险,但很少有前瞻性流行病学研究调查过这种关系。
我们试图确定在俄亥俄州辛辛那提市的297对母婴(家庭研究)中,早年暴露于BPA是否与2至5岁时体重指数(BMI)升高有关。
在孕妇孕中期和孕晚期以及她们1岁和2岁的孩子身上采集的样本中测量尿BPA浓度。根据2至5岁每年测量的体重/身高数据计算BMI z评分。我们使用线性混合模型来估计随着肌酐标准化BPA浓度增加的BMI差异或轨迹。
在进行混杂因素调整后,产前(β = -0.1;95%置信区间:-0.5,0.3)或幼儿期(β = -0.2;95%置信区间:-0.6,0.1)BPA浓度每增加10倍,与儿童BMI适度且不显著降低相关。这些反向关联在女孩中似乎比男孩更强[产前效应测量修正(EMM)p值 = 0.30,幼儿期EMM p值 = 0.05],但特定性别的关联并不精确。幼儿期BPA浓度处于最高三分位数的儿童在2岁时BMI较低(差异 = -0.3;95%置信区间:-0.6,0.0),并且从2岁到5岁其BMI斜率的增加幅度大于最低三分位数的儿童(每年BMI增加 = 0.12;95%置信区间:0.07,0.18)(每年BMI增加 = 0.07;95%置信区间:0.01,0.13)。所有关联在未进行肌酐标准化时均减弱。
产前和幼儿期暴露于BPA与2至5岁时BMI升高无关,但幼儿期较高的BPA暴露与该时期生长加速有关。