Department of Environmental Medicine and Public Health, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY, USA.
National Council of Science and Technology (CONACYT) - National Institute of Public Health (INSP), Cuernavaca, Morelos, Mexico.
Environ Res. 2021 Jan;192:110365. doi: 10.1016/j.envres.2020.110365. Epub 2020 Oct 22.
Exposure to particulate matter <2.5 μm in diameter (PM) and environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) are associated with respiratory morbidity starting in utero. However, their potential synergistic effects have not been completely elucidated. Here, we examined the joint effects of prenatal and early life PM and prenatal ETS exposure on respiratory outcomes in children.
We studied 536 mother-child dyads in the Programming Research in Obesity, Growth, Environment and Social Stressors (PROGRESS) study in Mexico City. Exposure to PM was estimated using residence in pregnancy and child's first year of life with a satellite-based spatio-temporal model. ETS exposure was assessed by caregiver's report of any smoker in the household during the second or third trimester. Outcomes included report of ever wheeze and wheeze in the past 12 months (current wheeze) assessed when children were 6-8 years old considered in separate models. Associations were modeled using distributed lag models (DLM) with daily PM averages for pregnancy and the first year of life, adjusting for child's sex, birth weight z-score, mother's age and education at enrollment, maternal asthma, season of conception and stratified by prenatal ETS exposure (yes/no).
We identified a sensitive window from gestational week 14 through postnatal week 18 during which PM was associated with higher risk of ever wheeze at age 6-8 years. We also observed a critical window of PM exposure between postnatal weeks 6-39 and higher risk of current wheeze. We found significant associations between higher prenatal and early life PM exposure and higher cumulative risk ratios of ever wheeze (RR:3.76, 95%CI [1.41, 10.0] per 5 μg/m) and current wheeze in the past year (RR:7.91, 95%CI [1.5, 41.6] per 5 μg/m) only among children born to mothers exposed to ETS in pregnancy when compared to mothers who were not exposed.
Exposure to prenatal ETS modified the association between prenatal and early life PM exposure and respiratory outcomes at age 6-8 years. It is important to consider concurrent chemical exposures to more comprehensively characterize children's environmental risk. Interventions aimed at decreasing passive smoking might mitigate the effects of ambient air pollution.
直径小于 2.5μm 的颗粒物(PM)和环境烟草烟雾(ETS)暴露与宫内胎儿开始的呼吸道发病率有关。然而,它们潜在的协同作用尚未完全阐明。在这里,我们研究了产前和生命早期 PM 以及产前 ETS 暴露对儿童呼吸道结局的联合影响。
我们在墨西哥城的肥胖、生长、环境和社会应激源编程研究(PROGRESS)中研究了 536 对母婴对子。怀孕期间的 PM 暴露是通过基于卫星的时空模型来估计的,该模型基于母亲在怀孕期间和孩子出生后的第一年的居住地。ETS 暴露是通过照顾者报告在妊娠第二或第三阶段家中有任何吸烟者来评估的。结果包括在孩子 6-8 岁时评估的过去 12 个月内是否有喘息(当前喘息)的报告,分别在单独的模型中考虑。使用分布滞后模型(DLM)对妊娠和出生后第一年的每日 PM 平均值进行模型化,调整了儿童的性别、出生体重 z 分数、母亲在登记时的年龄和教育程度、母亲的哮喘、受孕季节,并按产前 ETS 暴露(是/否)进行分层。
我们确定了从妊娠第 14 周到产后第 18 周的敏感窗口,在此期间,PM 与 6-8 岁时发生喘息的风险增加有关。我们还观察到了产后第 6-39 周 PM 暴露的关键窗口,与当前喘息的风险增加有关。我们发现,与产前和生命早期 PM 暴露更高有关,并且在母亲暴露于产前 ETS 的情况下,产前和生命早期 PM 暴露与过去一年的喘息发生率更高的累积风险比(RR:3.76,95%CI [1.41,10.0]每 5μg/m)和当前喘息的累积风险比(RR:7.91,95%CI [1.5,41.6]每 5μg/m)显著相关。与未暴露于 ETS 的母亲相比。
产前 ETS 的暴露改变了产前和生命早期 PM 暴露与 6-8 岁时呼吸道结局的关联。考虑到同时存在的化学暴露,以更全面地描述儿童的环境风险是很重要的。旨在减少被动吸烟的干预措施可能会减轻环境空气污染的影响。