ISGlobal, Barcelona, Spain; Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona, Spain; Spanish Consortium for Research on Epidemiology and Public Health (CIBERESP), Instituto de Salud Carlos III, Madrid, Spain; Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry/Psychology, Erasmus MC, Rotterdam, the Netherlands; Generation R Study Group, Erasmus University Medical Center, Rotterdam, the Netherlands.
ISGlobal, Barcelona, Spain; Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona, Spain; Spanish Consortium for Research on Epidemiology and Public Health (CIBERESP), Instituto de Salud Carlos III, Madrid, Spain; Department of Psychiatry, Bellvitge University Hospital, Bellvitge Biomedical Research Institute-IDIBELL, Barcelona, Spain.
Environ Int. 2024 Apr;186:108619. doi: 10.1016/j.envint.2024.108619. Epub 2024 Apr 1.
Ambient air temperature may affect birth outcomes adversely, but little is known about their impact on foetal growth throughout pregnancy. We evaluated the association between temperature exposure during pregnancy and foetal size and growth in three European birth cohorts.
We studied 23,408 pregnant women from the English Born in Bradford cohort, Dutch Generation R Study, and Spanish INMA Project. Using the UrbClim model, weekly ambient air temperature exposure at 100x100m resolution at the mothers' residences during pregnancy was calculated. Estimated foetal weight, head circumference, and femur length at mid and late pregnancy and weight, head circumference, and length at birth were converted into standard deviation scores (SDS). Foetal growth from mid to late pregnancy was calculated (grams or centimetres/week). Cohort/region-specific distributed lag non-linear models were combined using a random-effects meta-analysis and results presented in reference to the median percentile of temperature (14 °C).
Weekly temperatures ranged from -5.6 (Bradford) to 30.3 °C (INMA-Sabadell). Cold and heat exposure during weeks 1-28 were associated with a smaller and larger head circumference in late pregnancy, respectively (e.g., for 9.5 °C: -1.6 SDS [95 %CI -2.0; -0.4] and for 20.0 °C: 1.8 SDS [0.7; 2.9]). A susceptibility period from weeks 1-7 was identified for cold exposure and a smaller head circumference at late pregnancy. Cold exposure was associated with a slower head circumference growth from mid to late pregnancy (for 5.5 °C: -0.1 cm/week [-0.2; -0.04]), with a susceptibility period from weeks 4-12. No associations that survived multiple testing correction were found for other foetal or any birth outcomes.
Cumulative exposure to cold and heat during pregnancy was associated with changes in foetal head circumference throughout gestation, with susceptibility periods for cold during the first pregnancy trimester. No associations were found at birth, suggesting potential recovery. Future research should replicate this study across different climatic regions including varying temperature profiles.
环境空气温度可能对生育结果产生不利影响,但对于整个孕期温度暴露对胎儿生长的影响知之甚少。我们评估了三个欧洲出生队列中孕期温度暴露与胎儿大小和生长的关系。
我们研究了英国布拉德福德出生队列、荷兰生育研究和西班牙 INMA 项目中的 23408 名孕妇。使用 UrbClim 模型,计算了孕妇在怀孕期间住所的每周环境空气温度暴露情况,分辨率为 100x100m。妊娠中期和晚期的估计胎儿体重、头围和股骨长度以及出生时的体重、头围和长度被转换为标准差分数 (SDS)。从中期到晚期妊娠的胎儿生长速度(克或厘米/周)进行了计算。使用随机效应荟萃分析对队列/地区特定的分布滞后非线性模型进行了组合,并以温度中位数百分位数(14°C)为参照呈现结果。
每周的温度范围从 -5.6°C(布拉德福德)到 30.3°C(INMA-Sabadell)。第 1-28 周的冷暴露和热暴露分别与晚期妊娠的头围较小和较大有关(例如,9.5°C:-1.6 SDS [95%CI -2.0;-0.4]和 20.0°C:1.8 SDS [0.7;2.9])。确定了冷暴露的易感期为第 1-7 周,与晚期妊娠的头围较小有关。冷暴露与从中期到晚期妊娠头围生长速度较慢有关(5.5°C:-0.1cm/周[-0.2;-0.04]),易感期为第 4-12 周。没有发现经过多次测试校正的其他胎儿或任何出生结果的关联。
孕期冷暴露和热暴露的累积暴露与整个孕期胎儿头围的变化有关,在妊娠早期存在冷暴露的易感期。在出生时未发现关联,提示可能存在恢复。未来的研究应在不同的气候区域(包括不同的温度曲线)中复制这项研究。