Cowell Whitney, Colicino Elena, Levin-Schwartz Yuri, Enlow Michelle Bosquet, Amarasiriwardena Chitra, Andra Syam S, Gennings Chris, Wright Robert O, Wright Rosalind J
Department of Environmental Medicine and Public Health, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY.
Department of Psychiatry, Boston Children's Hospital, Boston, MA.
Environ Epidemiol. 2021 Apr 2;5(2):e147. doi: 10.1097/EE9.0000000000000147. eCollection 2021 Apr.
Prenatal exposure to metals has been associated with a range of adverse neurocognitive outcomes; however, associations with early behavioral development are less well understood. We examined joint exposure to multiple co-occurring metals in relation to infant negative affect, a stable temperamental trait linked to psychopathology among children and adults.
Analyses included 308 mother-infant pairs enrolled in the PRISM pregnancy cohort. We measured As, Ba, Cd, Cs, Cr, Pb, and Sb in urine, collected on average during late pregnancy, by ICP-MS. At age 6 months, we assessed negative affect using the Infant Behavior Questionnaire-Revised. We used Weighted Quantile Sum (WQS) regression with repeated holdout validation to estimate the joint association between the metals and global negative affectivity, as well as four subdomains (Fear, Sadness, Distress to Limitations, and Falling Reactivity). We also tested for a sex interaction with estimated stratified weights.
In adjusted models, urinary metals were associated with higher scores on the Fear scale (β = 0.20, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.09, 0.30), which captures behavioral inhibition, characterized by startle or distress to sudden changes in the environment and inhibited approach to novelty. We observed a significant sex interaction (95% CI for the cross-product term: -0.19, -0.01), and stratified weights showed girls (61.6%) contributed substantially more to the mixture effect compared with boys (38.4%). Overall, Ba contributed the greatest mixture weight (22.5%), followed by Cs (14.9%) and As (14.6%).
Prenatal exposure to metals was associated with increased infant scores on the temperamental domain of fear, with girls showing particular sensitivity.Key words: Prenatal; Metals; Mixtures; Temperament; Infancy; Negative affect.
产前接触金属与一系列不良神经认知结果有关;然而,与早期行为发育的关联尚不太清楚。我们。我们研究了同时接触多种共存金属与婴儿消极情绪的关系,消极情绪是一种稳定的气质特征,与儿童和成人的精神病理学有关。
分析纳入了PRISM妊娠队列中的308对母婴。我们通过电感耦合等离子体质谱法(ICP-MS)测量了妊娠晚期平均采集的尿液中的砷、钡、镉、铯、铬、铅和锑。在婴儿6个月大时,我们使用修订后的婴儿行为问卷评估消极情绪。我们使用加权分位数和(WQS)回归及重复留出验证来估计金属与总体消极情绪以及四个子领域(恐惧、悲伤、对限制的苦恼和反应性下降)之间的联合关联。我们还测试了性别交互作用以及估计的分层权重。
在调整模型中,尿金属与恐惧量表上的较高得分相关(β = 0.20,95%置信区间[CI]:0.09,0.30),该量表反映行为抑制,其特征为对环境突然变化的惊吓或苦恼以及对新奇事物的接近抑制。我们观察到显著的性别交互作用(交叉乘积项的95% CI:-0.19,-0.01),分层权重显示女孩(61.6%)对混合效应的贡献比男孩(38.4%)大得多。总体而言,钡的混合权重最大(22.5%),其次是铯(14.9%)和砷(14.6%)。
产前接触金属与婴儿气质领域的恐惧得分增加有关,女孩表现出特别的敏感性。关键词:产前;金属;混合物;气质;婴儿期;消极情绪。