Department of Epidemiology, Brown University School of Public Health, Providence, RI 02912, USA.
Department of Epidemiology, Brown University School of Public Health, Providence, RI 02912, USA.
Environ Int. 2019 May;126:7-13. doi: 10.1016/j.envint.2019.02.023. Epub 2019 Feb 15.
Days of extreme temperature may be associated with transiently higher risk of preterm birth, but prior studies have been limited and results have been heterogeneous.
To evaluate the association between days of extreme heat and cold and risk of preterm birth among ~32 million live singleton births between 1989 and 2002 across 403 counties in the contiguous United States (US).
We used a distributed lag nonlinear model to estimate the association between population-weighted daily mean temperature and risk of preterm birth in each county and then pooled results across geographic regions and climate zones. We defined extreme heat and cold as the 95th and 5th percentile of the county-specific temperatures, respectively.
Preterm birth accounted for 9.3% of deliveries. There was a monotonic association between ambient temperature and risk of preterm birth. Days of extreme heat and cold were associated with a relative risk of preterm birth of 1.025 (95% CI: 1.015, 1.036) and 0.985 (95% CI: 0.976, 0.993) over the subsequent four days, respectively, relative to the county-specific median temperature. If causal, the fraction of preterm births attributable to extreme heat was 0.17% (empirical 95% CI: 0.14%, 0.19%), corresponding to 154 (empirical 95% CI: 127, 173) preterm births per million births. Extreme heat was more strongly associated with preterm birth in regions with colder and drier climates, and among younger women. Days of extreme cold temperature were associated with lower rather than higher risk of preterm birth.
Days of extreme heat, but not extreme cold, are associated with higher risk of preterm birth in the contiguous US. If causal, these results may have important implications for the management of pregnant women during forecasted periods of extreme heat.
极端温度日可能与早产的风险短暂升高有关,但之前的研究有限,结果也存在异质性。
评估 1989 年至 2002 年间美国大陆 403 个县约 3200 万例活产单胎中极端高温和低温日与早产风险之间的关系。
我们使用分布式滞后非线性模型来估计每个县的人口加权日平均温度与早产风险之间的关系,然后在地理区域和气候带之间汇总结果。我们将极端高温和低温分别定义为县特定温度的第 95 百分位和第 5 百分位。
早产占分娩的 9.3%。环境温度与早产风险之间存在单调关联。极端高温和低温日与随后四天早产的相对风险分别为 1.025(95%CI:1.015,1.036)和 0.985(95%CI:0.976,0.993)。如果是因果关系,则归因于极端高温的早产比例为 0.17%(经验 95%CI:0.14%,0.19%),相当于每百万分娩中有 154 例(经验 95%CI:127,173)早产。在气候寒冷干燥的地区以及年轻女性中,极端高温与早产的关系更为密切。极端低温日与早产风险较低而非较高相关。
在美国大陆,极端高温日而非极端低温日与早产风险升高有关。如果是因果关系,这些结果可能对预测期极端高温期间孕妇管理具有重要意义。