Gogna Priyanka, Borghese Michael M, Villeneuve Paul J, Kumarathasan Premkumari, Johnson Markey, Shutt Robin H, Ashley-Martin Jillian, Bouchard Maryse F, King Will D
Department of Public Health Sciences, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada.
Environmental Health Science and Research Bureau, Health Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
Environ Epidemiol. 2024 May 6;8(3):e308. doi: 10.1097/EE9.0000000000000308. eCollection 2024 Jun.
PM NO, and O contribute to the development of adverse pregnancy complications. While studies have investigated the independent effects of these exposures, literature on their combined effects is limited. Our objective was to study the multipollutant effects of PM, NO, and O on maternal systemic C-reactive protein (CRP) levels.
We used data from 1170 pregnant women enrolled in the Maternal-Infant Research on Environmental Chemicals Study (MIREC) study in Canada. Air pollution exposures were assigned to each participant based on residential location. CRP was measured in third-trimester blood samples. We fit multipollutant linear regression models and evaluated the effects of air pollutant mixtures (14-day averages) using repeated-holdout Weighted Quantile Sum (WQS) regression and by calculating the Air Quality Health Index (AQHI).
In multipollutant models adjusting for NO O, and green space, each interquartile range (IQR) increase in 14-day average PM (IQR: 6.9 µg/m) was associated with 27.1% (95% confidence interval [CI] = 6.2, 50.7) higher CRP. In air pollution mixture models adjusting for green space, each IQR increase in AQHI was associated with 37.7% (95% CI = 13.9, 66.5) higher CRP; and an IQR increase in the WQS index was associated with 78.6% (95% CI = 29.7, 146.0) higher CRP.
PM has the strongest relationship of the individual pollutants examined with maternal blood CRP concentrations. Mixtures incorporating all three pollutants, assessed using the AQHI and WQS index, showed stronger relationships with CRP compared with individual pollutants and illustrate the importance of conducting multipollutant analyses.
细颗粒物(PM)、氮氧化物(NO)和臭氧(O)会导致不良妊娠并发症的发生。虽然已有研究调查了这些暴露因素的独立影响,但关于它们联合作用的文献有限。我们的目的是研究PM、NO和O对孕妇全身C反应蛋白(CRP)水平的多污染物效应。
我们使用了参与加拿大母婴环境化学物质研究(MIREC)的1170名孕妇的数据。根据居住地点为每位参与者分配空气污染暴露情况。在孕晚期血样中测量CRP。我们拟合了多污染物线性回归模型,并使用重复留出加权分位数和(WQS)回归以及通过计算空气质量健康指数(AQHI)来评估空气污染物混合物(14天平均值)的影响。
在调整了NO、O和绿地因素的多污染物模型中,14天平均PM每增加一个四分位数间距(IQR)(IQR:6.9μg/m³),CRP升高27.1%(95%置信区间[CI]=6.2,50.7)。在调整了绿地因素的空气污染混合物模型中,AQHI每增加一个IQR,CRP升高37.7%(95%CI=13.9,66.5);WQS指数每增加一个IQR,CRP升高78.6%(95%CI=29.7,146.0)。
在所研究的单个污染物中,PM与孕妇血液CRP浓度的关系最为密切。使用AQHI和WQS指数评估的包含所有三种污染物的混合物与CRP的关系比单个污染物更强,这说明了进行多污染物分析的重要性。