Singer Alison B, Burstyn Igor, Thygesen Malene, Mortensen Preben Bo, Fallin M Daniele, Schendel Diana E
Department of Epidemiology and Wendy Klag Center for Autism and Developmental Disabilities, Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health, 615 N. Wolfe St, Baltimore, MD, 21205, USA.
Centre for Integrated Register-based Research, Aarhus University, Aarhus, Denmark.
Environ Health. 2017 Mar 31;16(1):31. doi: 10.1186/s12940-017-0230-8.
Environmental exposures and immune conditions during pregnancy could influence development of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) in offspring. However, few studies have examined immune-triggering exposures in relation to ASD. We evaluated the association between parental workplace exposures to risk factors for asthma ("asthmagens") and ASD.
We conducted a population-based case-control study in the Danish population using register linkage. Our study population consisted of 11,869 ASD cases and 48,046 controls born from 1993 through 2007. Cases were identified by ICD-10 codes in the Danish Psychiatric Central Register. ASD cases and controls were linked to parental Danish International Standard Classification of Occupations (DISCO-88) job codes. Parental occupational asthmagen exposure was estimated by linking DISCO-88 codes to an asthma-specific job-exposure matrix.
Our maternal analyses included 6706 case mothers and 29,359 control mothers employed during the pregnancy period. We found a weak inverse association between ASD and any maternal occupational asthmagen exposure, adjusting for sociodemographic covariates (adjusted OR: 0.92, 95% CI: 0.86-0.99). In adjusted analyses, including 7647 cases and 31,947 controls with employed fathers, paternal occupational asthmagen exposure was not associated with ASD (adjusted OR: 0.98, 95% CI: 0.92-1.05).
We found a weak inverse association between maternal occupational asthmagen exposure and ASD, and a null association between paternal occupational exposure and ASD. We suggest that unmeasured confounding negatively biased the estimate, but that this unmeasured confounding is likely not strong enough to bring the effect above the null. Overall, our results were consistent with no positive association between parental asthmagen exposure and ASD in the children.
孕期的环境暴露和免疫状况可能会影响后代自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)的发展。然而,很少有研究探讨与ASD相关的免疫触发暴露因素。我们评估了父母工作场所暴露于哮喘风险因素(“哮喘原”)与ASD之间的关联。
我们在丹麦人群中利用登记关联进行了一项基于人群的病例对照研究。我们的研究人群包括1993年至2007年出生的11869例ASD病例和48046例对照。病例通过丹麦精神病学中央登记处的ICD-10编码确定。ASD病例和对照与父母的丹麦国际职业分类标准(DISCO-88)工作编码相关联。通过将DISCO-88编码与特定于哮喘的工作暴露矩阵相关联来估计父母的职业性哮喘原暴露。
我们的母亲分析包括6706例病例母亲和29359例孕期就业的对照母亲。在调整社会人口统计学协变量后(调整后的OR:0.92,95%CI:0.86-0.99),我们发现ASD与母亲任何职业性哮喘原暴露之间存在微弱的负相关。在包括7647例病例和31947例父亲就业的对照的调整分析中,父亲的职业性哮喘原暴露与ASD无关(调整后的OR:0.98,95%CI:0.92-1.05)。
我们发现母亲职业性哮喘原暴露与ASD之间存在微弱的负相关,而父亲职业性暴露与ASD之间无关联。我们认为未测量的混杂因素对估计值产生了负偏倚,但这种未测量的混杂因素可能不够强大到使效应高于零值。总体而言,我们的结果与父母哮喘原暴露与儿童ASD之间不存在正相关一致。