Center on Food Security and the Environment, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA.
Center on Food Security and the Environment, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA.
Environ Res. 2022 Jan;203:111872. doi: 10.1016/j.envres.2021.111872. Epub 2021 Aug 14.
There is limited population-scale evidence on the burden of exposure to wildfire smoke during pregnancy and its impacts on birth outcomes. In order to investigate this relationship, data on every singleton birth in California 2006-2012 were combined with satellite-based estimates of wildfire smoke plume boundaries and high-resolution gridded estimates of surface PM concentrations and a regression model was used to estimate associations with preterm birth risk. Results suggest that each additional day of exposure to any wildfire smoke during pregnancy was associated with an 0.49 % (95 % CI: 0.41-0.59 %) increase in risk of preterm birth (<37 weeks). At sample median smoke exposure (7 days) this translated to a 3.4 % increase in risk, relative to an unexposed mother. Estimates by trimester suggest stronger associations with exposure later in pregnancy and estimates by smoke intensity indicate that observed associations were driven by higher intensity smoke-days. Exposure to low intensity smoke-days had no association with preterm birth while an additional medium (smoke PM 5-10 μg/m) or high (smoke PM > 10 μg/m) intensity smoke-day was associated with an 0.95 % (95 % CI: 0.47-1.42 %) and 0.82 % (95 % CI: 0.41-1.24 %) increase in preterm risk, respectively. In contrast to previous findings for other pollution types, neither exposure to smoke nor the relative impact of smoke on preterm birth differed by race/ethnicity or income in our sample. However, impacts differed greatly by baseline smoke exposure, with mothers in regions with infrequent smoke exposure experiencing substantially larger impacts from an additional smoke-day than mothers in regions where smoke is more common. We estimate 6,974 (95 % CI: 5,513-8,437) excess preterm births attributable to wildfire smoke exposure 2007-2012, accounting for 3.7 % of observed preterm births during this period. Our findings have important implications for understanding the costs of growing wildfire smoke exposure, and for understanding the benefits of smoke mitigation measures.
关于怀孕期间接触野火烟雾的负担及其对出生结果的影响,目前仅有有限的人群规模证据。为了研究这种关系,将 2006 年至 2012 年加利福尼亚州每例 singleton 出生的数据与基于卫星的野火烟雾羽流边界估计以及高分辨率网格化的地表 PM 浓度估计相结合,并使用回归模型来估计与早产风险的关联。结果表明,怀孕期间每多接触一天野火烟雾,早产风险就会增加 0.49%(95%CI:0.41-0.59%)(<37 周)。在样本中位数的烟雾暴露(7 天)下,与未暴露的母亲相比,风险增加了 3.4%。按妊娠季度进行的估计表明,与妊娠晚期接触的关联更强,按烟雾强度进行的估计表明,观察到的关联是由更高强度的烟雾日引起的。接触低强度烟雾日与早产无关,而额外的中等强度(烟雾 PM 5-10μg/m)或高强度(烟雾 PM>10μg/m)烟雾日分别与早产风险增加 0.95%(95%CI:0.47-1.42%)和 0.82%(95%CI:0.41-1.24%)相关。与之前对其他污染类型的研究结果相反,在我们的样本中,无论是暴露于烟雾还是烟雾对早产的相对影响,都不因种族/民族或收入而异。然而,影响差异很大,与烟雾暴露基线较低的母亲相比,烟雾较少的地区的母亲因额外的烟雾日而导致的影响要大得多。我们估计 2007-2012 年因野火烟雾暴露而导致的早产人数为 6974 人(95%CI:5513-8437),占这期间观察到的早产人数的 3.7%。我们的研究结果对于理解不断增加的野火烟雾暴露的成本以及理解烟雾缓解措施的益处具有重要意义。