Pesce Giancarlo, Sesé Lucile, Calciano Lucia, Travert Benoit, Dessimond Boris, Maesano Cara Nichole, Ferrante Giuliana, Huel Guy, Prud'homme Julie, Guinot Martine, Soomro Munawar Hussain, Baloch Ramen Munir, Lhote Raphael, Annesi-Maesano Isabella
Epidemiology of Allergic and Respiratory Diseases (EPAR) Team, Faculté de Médecine Saint-Antoine, Institute Pierre Louis d'Epidemiologie et Sante Publique (IPLESP), Sorbonne Université and INSERM UMR-S 1136, Paris, France.
Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP), Service des Explorations Fonctionnelles et Respiratoires, Hôpital Avicenne, Bobigny, France.
Pediatr Allergy Immunol. 2021 Feb;32(2):242-250. doi: 10.1111/pai.13397. Epub 2020 Nov 6.
Accumulating evidence suggests that in utero exposures can influence the development of the immune system and thus contribute to disease development. Studies investigating the association between prenatal exposures to heavy metals and atopic diseases, however, are scarce.
Children from the EDEN birth cohort were prospectively followed up using parental questionnaires with validated questions on asthma, allergic rhinitis, eczema, and food allergy symptoms. The questionnaires were administered every 4 months during the children's first year, and then every year until the age of 5, with a final survey at the age of 8. Serum concentrations of lead (Pb), cadmium (Cd), and manganese (Mn) were assessed in maternal blood samples collected during mid-pregnancy and in cord blood of 651 mother-children pairs. Hazard ratios (HR) for the incidence of each atopic disease in relation to the exposure to metals were calculated using Cox proportional hazard models.
Levels of Cd in cord blood were associated with greater risk of asthma (hazard ratio [95% confidence interval] for upper vs lower quartile: 1.81 [1.00-3.29]), eczema (1.60 [1.09-2.35]), and food allergy (3.17 [1.36-7.38]), while Mn levels in maternal serum were associated with eczema (1.55 [1.05-2.28]). These associations were similar in males and females and were confirmed using log concentrations of metals as exposures.
Our results support the hypothesis that fetal exposure to heavy metals may affect the development of asthma, eczema, and food allergy in childhood and suggest that timing of exposure in utero may have a role in these associations.
越来越多的证据表明,子宫内暴露会影响免疫系统的发育,从而导致疾病的发生。然而,关于产前接触重金属与过敏性疾病之间关联的研究却很少。
对来自EDEN出生队列的儿童进行前瞻性随访,使用经过验证的有关哮喘、过敏性鼻炎、湿疹和食物过敏症状的家长问卷。在儿童出生后的第一年,每4个月进行一次问卷调查,然后每年进行一次,直至5岁,最后在8岁时进行一次调查。对651对母婴在孕中期采集的母亲血液样本和脐带血中的铅(Pb)、镉(Cd)和锰(Mn)血清浓度进行了评估。使用Cox比例风险模型计算每种过敏性疾病发病率与金属暴露相关的风险比(HR)。
脐带血中的镉水平与哮喘(上四分位数与下四分位数的风险比[95%置信区间]:1.81[1.00-3.29])、湿疹(1.60[1.09-2.35])和食物过敏(3.17[1.36-7.38])的较高风险相关,而母亲血清中的锰水平与湿疹(1.55[1.05-2.28])相关。这些关联在男性和女性中相似,并使用金属的对数浓度作为暴露因素得到了证实。
我们的结果支持胎儿接触重金属可能影响儿童哮喘、湿疹和食物过敏发展的假设,并表明子宫内暴露的时间可能在这些关联中起作用。