Public Health program, Department of Population Health, School of Medicine & Health Sciences, University of North Dakota, Room E162, 1301 North Columbia Road Stop 9037, Grand Forks, ND, 58202-9037, USA.
School of Social Sciences, Humanities and Arts, Health Science Research Institute, University of California, 5200 N. Lake Road, Merced, CA, USA.
Environ Health. 2021 May 8;20(1):56. doi: 10.1186/s12940-021-00738-7.
Asian/Pacific Islander (API) communities in the United States often reside in metropolitan areas with distinct social and environmental attributes. Residence in an ethnic enclave, a socially distinct area, is associated with lower gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) risk, yet exposure to high levels of air pollution, including volatile organic compounds (VOCS), is associated with increased GDM risk. We examined the joint effects of ethnic enclaves and VOCs to better understand GDM risk among API women, the group with the highest prevalence of GDM.
We examined 9069 API births in the Consortium on Safe Labor (19 hospitals, 2002-2008). API ethnic enclaves were defined as areas ≥66th percentile for percent API residents, dissimilarity (geographic dispersal of API and White residents), and isolation (degree that API individuals interact with another API individual). High levels of 14 volatile organic compounds (VOC) were defined as ≥75th percentile. Four joint categories were created for each VOC: Low VOC/Enclave (reference group), Low VOC/No Enclave, High VOC/Enclave, High VOC/No Enclave. GDM was reported in medical records. Hierarchical logistic regression estimated odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (95%CI) between joint exposures and GDM, adjusted for maternal factors and area-level poverty. Risk was estimated for 3-months preconception and first trimester exposures.
Enclave residence was associated with lower GDM risk regardless of VOC exposure. Preconception benzene exposure was associated with increased risk when women resided outside enclaves [High VOC/No Enclave (OR:3.45, 95%CI:1.77,6.72)], and the effect was somewhat mitigated within enclaves, [High VOC/Enclave (OR:2.07, 95%:1.09,3.94)]. Risks were similar for 12 of 14 VOCs during preconception and 10 of 14 during the first trimester.
API residence in non-enclave areas is associated with higher GDM risk, regardless of VOC level. Ethnic enclave residence may mitigate effects of VOC exposure, perhaps due to lower stress levels. The potential benefit of ethnic enclaves warrants further study.
美国的亚太裔(API)社区通常居住在具有独特社会和环境特征的大都市区。居住在少数民族飞地,一个社会上独特的区域,与较低的妊娠糖尿病(GDM)风险相关,然而,暴露于高水平的空气污染,包括挥发性有机化合物(VOCS),与增加的 GDM 风险相关。我们研究了种族飞地和 VOC 的共同作用,以更好地了解 API 女性(GDM 患病率最高的群体)的 GDM 风险。
我们研究了 19 家医院在 2002 年至 2008 年期间的“安全分娩联盟”中的 9069 名 API 出生情况。API 种族飞地的定义是 API 居民比例≥66%、相似性(API 和白人居民的地理分散程度)和隔离度(API 个体与另一个 API 个体相互作用的程度)≥75%的 14 种挥发性有机化合物(VOC)的高浓度。创建了四个 VOC 联合类别:低 VOC/飞地(参考组)、低 VOC/无飞地、高 VOC/飞地、高 VOC/无飞地。GDM 是在医疗记录中报告的。分层逻辑回归估计了联合暴露与 GDM 之间的优势比(OR)和 95%置信区间(95%CI),调整了产妇因素和区域贫困水平。风险估计了受孕前 3 个月和妊娠早期的暴露情况。
无论 VOC 暴露如何,飞地居住都与较低的 GDM 风险相关。在妇女居住在飞地之外时,苯的孕前暴露与风险增加相关[高 VOC/无飞地(OR:3.45,95%CI:1.77,6.72)],而在飞地内,这种效应有所缓解[高 VOC/飞地(OR:2.07,95%:1.09,3.94)]。在受孕前和妊娠早期的 14 种 VOC 中有 12 种和 14 种中的 10 种风险相似。
无论 VOC 水平如何,API 居住在非飞地地区与较高的 GDM 风险相关。种族飞地居住可能会减轻 VOC 暴露的影响,这可能是由于压力水平较低。种族飞地的潜在好处值得进一步研究。