Stroud Laura R, Papandonatos George D, Jao Nancy C, Niaura Raymond, Buka Stephen, Benowitz Neal L
Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, Warren Alpert Medical School, Brown University, Box G-BH, Providence, RI 02912, United States; Center for Behavioral and Preventive Medicine, The Miriam Hospital, Coro West, Suite 309, 164 Summit Avenue, Providence, RI 02906, United States.
Department of Biostatistics, School of Public Health, Brown University, G-S121-7, 121 South Main Street, Providence, RI 02912, United States.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2022 Apr 1;233:109358. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2022.109358. Epub 2022 Feb 17.
Maternal cigarette smoking is an important modifiable risk factor for low birth weight in the US. We investigated the maternal nicotine metabolite ratio (NMR; trans-3'-hydroxycotinine/cotinine) - a genetically-informed biomarker of nicotine clearance - as a moderator of links between prenatal cigarette use and birth weight. We also explored the role of race in these associations.
Participants were 454 pregnant women (M = 25 years; 11% Black) who smoked cigarettes and their 537 infants from the Collaborative Perinatal Project. Cigarettes smoked per day were assessed at each prenatal visit; maternal NMR was assayed from third trimester serum. Birth weight was obtained from medical records. Generalized estimating equations were used to evaluate associations between cigarette smoking, NMR, race, and birth weight.
NMR moderated continuous associations between cigarettes per day over pregnancy and infant birth weight (p = .025). Among women who smoked at moderate levels (<15 cigarettes per day), those with slower NMR showed ~50-100 g decrements in birth weight versus those with faster NMR., while there were no significant associations between NMR and birth weight among women who smoked 15+ cigarettes per day. Although effects of NMR on birthweight were similar for Black and white women, Black women showed significantly slower NMR (p < .001).
This is the first demonstration that the maternal nicotine metabolism phenotype moderates associations between maternal smoking during pregnancy and birth weight. Infants of women with slower nicotine metabolism - including disproportionate representation of Black women - may be at heightened risk for morbidity from maternal smoking.
在美国,孕妇吸烟是导致低出生体重的一个重要且可改变的风险因素。我们研究了母体尼古丁代谢物比率(NMR;反式-3'-羟基可替宁/可替宁)——一种基于基因信息的尼古丁清除生物标志物——作为产前吸烟与出生体重之间关联的调节因素。我们还探讨了种族在这些关联中的作用。
参与者为来自围产期协作项目的454名吸烟孕妇(平均年龄 = 25岁;11%为黑人)及其537名婴儿。每次产前检查时评估每日吸烟量;从孕晚期血清中检测母体NMR。出生体重从医疗记录中获取。使用广义估计方程来评估吸烟、NMR、种族与出生体重之间的关联。
NMR调节了孕期每日吸烟量与婴儿出生体重之间的连续关联(p = 0.025)。在中度吸烟(每天<15支)的女性中,NMR较慢者的出生体重比NMR较快者低约50 - 100克,而在每天吸烟15支及以上的女性中,NMR与出生体重之间无显著关联。尽管NMR对出生体重的影响在黑人和白人女性中相似,但黑人女性的NMR明显较慢(p < 0.001)。
这是首次证明母体尼古丁代谢表型调节孕期母体吸烟与出生体重之间的关联。尼古丁代谢较慢的女性所生婴儿——包括黑人女性占比过高——可能因母体吸烟而患病风险更高。