Department of Environmental Medicine and Public Health, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, One Gustave L. Levy Place, Box 1057, New York, NY, 10029, USA.
Department of Environmental Medicine and Public Health, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, One Gustave L. Levy Place, Box 1057, New York, NY, 10029, USA.
Environ Res. 2020 Apr;183:109251. doi: 10.1016/j.envres.2020.109251. Epub 2020 Feb 15.
Prior estimates of pediatric lead-related disease burden in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) used population estimates of maternal blood lead levels (BLLs). This approach may underestimate fetal BLLs by not considering potentially high prenatal lead exposure from toxic hotspots OBJECTIVES: We developed a probabilistic approach to using the Adult Lead Methodology (ALM) to estimate fetal BLLs from prenatal exposure to lead-contaminated soil at hotspots in the Toxic Site Identification Program (TSIP).
We created distributions for each ALM parameter using published literature and extracted soil lead measurements from the TSIP database. Each iteration of the probabilistic ALM randomly selected values from the input distributions to generate a site-specific fetal BLL estimate. For each site, we ran 5000 model iterations, producing a site-specific fetal BLL distribution.
195 TSIP sites, in 33 LMICs, met our study inclusion criteria; an estimated 820,000 women of childbearing age are at risk for lead exposure at these sites. The predicted geometric means (GM) for site-specific fetal BLLs ranged from 3.3 μg/dL to 534 μg/dL, and 98% of sites had estimated GM fetal BLLs >5 μg/dL, the current reference level of the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), while 11 sites had estimated GM fetal BLLs above the CDC chelation threshold of 45 μg/dL.
The TSIP soil lead data and this probabilistic approach to the ALM show that pregnant women living near TSIP sites may have BLLs that put their fetus at risk for neurologic damage and other sequelae, underscoring the need for interventions to reduce lead exposure at toxic hotspots.
先前在中低收入国家(LMICs)进行的儿科铅相关疾病负担估算使用了母体血铅水平(BLL)的人口估计值。这种方法可能会低估胎儿 BLL,因为它没有考虑到来自有毒热点地区的潜在高产前铅暴露。
我们开发了一种使用成人铅方法(ALM)的概率方法,从有毒地点识别计划(TSIP)中受污染土壤的产前暴露来估计胎儿 BLL。
我们使用已发表的文献为每个 ALM 参数创建了分布,并从 TSIP 数据库中提取了土壤铅测量值。概率 ALM 的每次迭代都从输入分布中随机选择值,以生成特定地点的胎儿 BLL 估计值。对于每个地点,我们运行了 5000 次模型迭代,生成了特定地点的胎儿 BLL 分布。
33 个 LMIC 中的 195 个 TSIP 地点符合我们的研究纳入标准;估计有 820,000 名育龄妇女面临这些地点的铅暴露风险。特定地点胎儿 BLL 的预测几何平均值(GM)范围从 3.3μg/dL 到 534μg/dL,98%的地点估计 GM 胎儿 BLL>5μg/dL,这是美国疾病控制与预防中心(CDC)的当前参考水平,而 11 个地点的估计 GM 胎儿 BLL 高于 CDC 的螯合阈值 45μg/dL。
TSIP 土壤铅数据和这种对 ALM 的概率方法表明,居住在 TSIP 地点附近的孕妇可能有使胎儿面临神经损伤和其他后遗症风险的 BLL,这凸显了减少有毒热点地区铅暴露的干预措施的必要性。