Department of Psychological Science, School of Social Ecology, University of California Irvine, Irvine, CA, USA.
Department of Psychology & Consortium for Combating Substance Abuse, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, USA.
Neurotoxicol Teratol. 2023 Jan-Feb;95:107134. doi: 10.1016/j.ntt.2022.107134. Epub 2022 Nov 14.
Exposure to tobacco and cannabis during developmental periods of enhanced vulnerability (e.g., in utero and early childhood) may have long-lasting effects on child health. One potential mechanism underlying these associations is the alteration of inflammatory pathways. Using data from a longitudinal study of mother/child dyads, we examined the adjusted and combined associations of prenatal and postnatal tobacco and cannabis exposure with inflammation in early childhood. Furthermore, we explored the relations between different measures of exposure, partly reflecting differences in timing, dose, and level of fetal exposure (e.g., self-report vs. biomarker), and inflammation. Finally, we explored child sex as a moderator of prenatal and postnatal tobacco and cannabis exposure and inflammation.
Women were recruited from a local hospital during their first prenatal appointment. Repeated assessments were conducted at each trimester, at birth, and when children were 2, 9, 16, 24, 36, and 60 months old (N = 215; 112 female children). To evaluate associations with different measurement approaches, prenatal tobacco and cannabis exposure were assessed using: 1) continuous dose-response variables of maternal self-reported tobacco and cannabis use during each trimester to assess associations with timing and severity of exposure, 2) categorization of children into exposure groups based on drugs and metabolites present in infant meconium reflecting later pregnancy fetal exposure, and 3) categorization into exposure groups using a combination of maternal self-report data and biomarker data derived from maternal saliva samples and infant meconium taking advantage of multiple methods of assessment to examine group differences. Postnatal exposure to tobacco (assessed using child salivary cotinine) and cannabis (assessed using maternal self-reported average joints smoked per day) was measured at each infancy/early childhood assessment. Adjusted pre- and postnatal exposure associations with child inflammation were assessed by including both measures as predictor variables in linear regression models predicting child salivary C-reactive protein (CRP) concentrations at 60 months. Interactions between pre- and postnatal exposure variables were then modeled to investigate the combined relations between pre- and postnatal substance exposure with child salivary CRP concentrations at 60 months.
Adjusting for postnatal exposure variables, there was a significant interaction between the average daily cigarettes and the average daily cannabis joints smoked during the third trimester predicting salivary CRP concentrations in early childhood. At high tobacco exposure, the effect of cannabis on CRP concentrations was negligible, whereas at low tobacco exposure, the effect of cannabis exposure on CRP concentrations was positive. Adjusting for postnatal tobacco and cannabis exposure, children for whom meconium data indicated co-exposure to tobacco and cannabis showed approximately 43% lower CRP concentrations at age 60 months compared to children with no exposure. However, when mother/child dyads were categorized based on a combination of maternal self-report data and biomarker data from saliva samples and infant meconium, there were no differences in salivary CRP concentrations at age 60 months across the three groups (no prenatal exposure, prenatal tobacco exposure only, prenatal co-exposure to tobacco and cannabis), controlling for postnatal associations. Regardless of the measurement method used to assess prenatal exposures in adjusted analyses, prenatal tobacco exposure alone did not predict CRP concentrations in early childhood, nor did postnatal tobacco exposure. Among boys, postnatal cannabis exposure was associated with higher concentrations of CRP at age 60 months, controlling for prenatal exposure relations. There were no significant combined associations of pre- and postnatal exposure with CRP concentrations.
This study expands upon known relations between prenatal and postnatal substance exposure and immunological outcomes in early childhood, underscoring the importance of assessing cannabis exposure during gestation and early life in combination with tobacco exposure.
在易受伤害的发展时期(例如宫内和幼儿期)暴露于烟草和大麻可能对儿童健康产生持久影响。这些关联的潜在机制之一是炎症途径的改变。使用来自母婴对子纵向研究的数据,我们研究了产前和产后烟草和大麻暴露与儿童早期炎症的调整和综合关联。此外,我们探讨了不同暴露测量方法之间的关系,这些方法部分反映了胎儿暴露的时间、剂量和水平的差异(例如,自我报告与生物标志物)与炎症的关系。最后,我们探讨了儿童性别作为产前和产后烟草和大麻暴露与炎症的调节剂。
在女性第一次产前预约时,从当地医院招募女性。在每个三个月期、出生时以及儿童 2、9、16、24、36 和 60 个月大时(N=215;112 名女性儿童)进行重复评估。为了评估与不同测量方法的关联,使用以下方法评估产前烟草和大麻暴露:1)通过母亲在每个三个月期的自我报告烟草和大麻使用的连续剂量-反应变量来评估暴露的时间和严重程度,2)根据婴儿胎粪中存在的毒品和代谢物将儿童分类为暴露组,反映晚期妊娠胎儿暴露,3)使用母亲唾液样本和婴儿胎粪中的生物标志物数据的组合将儿童分类为暴露组,利用多种评估方法来检查组间差异。在每个婴儿/幼儿评估时,通过儿童唾液可替宁检测评估产后烟草暴露(评估)和大麻暴露(使用母亲自我报告的平均每日吸烟量评估)。通过将这两种方法作为预测变量纳入线性回归模型,以预测儿童 60 个月时唾液 C 反应蛋白(CRP)浓度,评估调整后的产前和产后暴露与儿童炎症的关联。然后对产前和产后暴露变量进行交互建模,以研究儿童 60 个月时唾液 CRP 浓度的产前和产后物质暴露的综合关系。
在调整了产后暴露变量后,第三个三个月期的平均每日香烟和平均每日吸食大麻量与预测儿童唾液 CRP 浓度之间存在显著的交互作用。在高烟草暴露的情况下,大麻对 CRP 浓度的影响可以忽略不计,而在低烟草暴露的情况下,大麻暴露对 CRP 浓度的影响是阳性的。在调整了产后烟草和大麻暴露后,胎粪数据显示烟草和大麻共同暴露的儿童在 60 个月时的 CRP 浓度比无暴露的儿童低约 43%。然而,当根据母亲/儿童对的自我报告数据和来自唾液样本和婴儿胎粪的生物标志物数据将母亲/儿童对分类时,在调整了产后关联后,三个组(无产前暴露、产前仅暴露于烟草、产前共同暴露于烟草和大麻)的唾液 CRP 浓度在 60 个月时没有差异。在调整分析中,无论使用哪种方法评估产前暴露,产前烟草暴露本身都不能预测儿童早期的 CRP 浓度,也不能预测产后烟草暴露。在男孩中,产后大麻暴露与 60 个月时的 CRP 浓度较高有关,这与产前暴露的关系有关。产前和产后暴露没有明显的综合关联与 CRP 浓度。
本研究扩展了已知的产前和产后物质暴露与儿童早期免疫结果之间的关系,强调了在妊娠和生命早期评估大麻暴露与烟草暴露相结合的重要性。