Montana State University BIllings, Billings, MT, United States.
University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center, College of Pharmacy, Community Environmental Health Program, Albuquerque, NM, United States.
Environ Res. 2020 Nov;190:109943. doi: 10.1016/j.envres.2020.109943. Epub 2020 Jul 17.
Navajo Nation residents are at risk for exposure to uranium and other co-occurring metals found in abandoned mine waste. The Navajo Birth Cohort Study (NBCS) was initiated in 2010 to address community concerns regarding the impact of chronic environmental exposure to metals on pregnancy and birth outcomes. The objectives of this paper were to 1) evaluate maternal urine concentrations of key metals at enrollment and delivery from a pregnancy cohort; and 2) compare the NBCS to the US general population by comparing representative summary statistical values. Pregnant Navajo women (N = 783, age range 14-45 years) were recruited from hospital facilities on the Navajo Nation during prenatal visits and urine samples were collected by trained staff in pre-screened containers. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), National Center for Environmental Health's (NCEH) Division of Laboratory Sciences (DLS) analyzed urine samples for metals. Creatinine-corrected urine concentrations of cadmium decreased between enrollment (1st or 2nd trimester) and delivery (3rd trimester) while urine uranium concentrations were not observed to change. Median and 95th percentile values of maternal NBCS urine concentrations of uranium, manganese, cadmium, and lead exceeded respective percentiles for National Health and Nutrition Evaluation Survey (NHANES) percentiles for women (ages 14-45 either pregnant or not pregnant.) Median NBCS maternal urine uranium concentrations were 2.67 (enrollment) and 2.8 (delivery) times greater than the NHANES median concentration, indicating that pregnant Navajo women are exposed to metal mixtures and have higher uranium exposure compared to NHANES data for women. This demonstrates support for community concerns about uranium exposure and suggests a need for additional analyses to evaluate the impact of maternal metal mixtures exposure on birth outcomes.
纳瓦霍族居民面临接触铀和其他在废弃矿山废物中发现的共存金属的风险。纳瓦霍族出生队列研究(NBCS)于 2010 年启动,旨在解决社区对慢性环境暴露于金属对怀孕和生育结果影响的担忧。本文的目的是:1)评估妊娠队列中产妇尿液中关键金属的浓度;2)通过比较代表性的汇总统计值,将 NBCS 与美国一般人群进行比较。在产前就诊期间,从纳瓦霍族的医院设施中招募了怀孕的纳瓦霍族妇女(N=783,年龄在 14-45 岁之间),并由经过培训的工作人员在预先筛选的容器中收集尿液样本。美国疾病控制与预防中心(CDC)、国家环境卫生中心(NCEH)的实验室科学部(DLS)分析了尿液样本中的金属。尿镉浓度(以肌酐校正)在入组(第一或第二孕期)和分娩(第三孕期)之间下降,而尿铀浓度未见变化。铀、锰、镉和铅的母体 NBCS 尿液浓度的中位数和 95 百分位数值均超过了国家健康和营养评估调查(NHANES)相应百分位数,这表明孕妇接触到了混合金属,且与 NHANES 数据相比,孕妇的铀暴露水平更高。这表明支持社区对铀暴露的担忧,并表明需要进一步分析来评估母体金属混合物暴露对生育结果的影响。