Remigio Richard V, Burris Heather H, Clougherty Jane E
Department of Global, Occupational, and Environmental Health, School of Public Health, University of Maryland, College Park, College Park, MD, USA.
Urban Health Collaborative, Dornsife School of Public Health, Drexel University, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
Environ Health. 2025 May 31;24(1):33. doi: 10.1186/s12940-025-01189-0.
Air pollution has been associated with adverse birth outcomes, with variation by socioeconomic position (SEP). However, it remains unknown which aspects of lower SEP - comprised of myriad physical and psychosocial stressors - may best explain observed pollution susceptibilities. Building upon previous studies that estimated joint associations of air pollution and socioeconomic deprivation on term birth weight in New York City (NYC), this study seeks to identify specific social stressors underlying that relationship.
We examined records for 243,853 term births in NYC from 2007-2010. Residence-specific pregnancy-average NO was estimated using NYC Community Air Survey (NYCCAS) and EPA regulatory data. Twenty-six community social stressor indicators were tested as modifiers of NO-birthweight associations in linear mixed-effects models, adjusting for particulate matter (PM), individual-level maternal characteristics, and other covariates. In sensitivity analyses, we also examined non-linear interactions between continuous NO and census-tract level violence and deprivation terms.
Consistent with previous work, a 1-IQR (6.2 ppb) increase in average prenatal NO exposure was associated with a 12.6 (SE = 2.7)-gram decrease in term birthweight.We observed similar values in independent models for most stressors related to violent crime or SEP and significantly lower birthweights with higher stressor exposures. In models of effect modification, however, we found that - despite lower average birthweights in high-stressor communities - NO-birthweight associations were weaker in higher-stressor communities, particularly for violence-related stressors. For example, in the highest-quartile communities for assault, a 1-IQR increase in NO exhibited a decrement of only 7.3 g, on average, compared to 16.9 g in the lowest-assault quartile (p = .01 trend across quartiles). Exposures to non-violent stressors were not significantly associated with lower birthweights, nor modified observed NO-birthweight associations.
We found significantly lower term-infant birthweights with higher NO or community stressors. Counter to hypotheses, however, in communities with very high stressor exposures (esp. violent crimes), despite lower overall birthweights, associations for NO were weaker than in low-stressor communities. Our results suggest a possible saturation effect in stress-pollution interactions, wherein very high stressor exposures appear to overwhelm any effects of pollution. In addition, we observed stronger effects for violent crimes, in relation to other social stressors.
空气污染与不良出生结局有关,且存在社会经济地位(SEP)差异。然而,尚不清楚由众多生理和心理社会压力源构成的较低SEP的哪些方面最能解释观察到的污染易感性。基于先前估计纽约市(NYC)空气污染与社会经济剥夺对足月出生体重的联合关联的研究,本研究旨在确定该关系背后的特定社会压力源。
我们检查了2007 - 2010年纽约市243,853例足月分娩的记录。使用纽约市社区空气调查(NYCCAS)和美国环境保护局(EPA)监管数据估计特定居住地孕期平均二氧化氮(NO)水平。在调整颗粒物(PM)、个体水平的孕产妇特征和其他协变量的线性混合效应模型中,测试了26个社区社会压力源指标作为NO与出生体重关联的调节因素。在敏感性分析中,我们还检查了连续的NO与普查区层面的暴力和剥夺指标之间的非线性相互作用。
与先前的研究一致,产前平均NO暴露每增加1个四分位距(IQR,6.2 ppb),足月出生体重就会降低12.6(标准误 = 2.7)克。在与暴力犯罪或SEP相关的大多数压力源的独立模型中,我们观察到了类似的值,且压力源暴露较高时出生体重显著降低。然而,在效应修饰模型中,我们发现 - 尽管高压力社区的平均出生体重较低 - 但在高压力社区中NO与出生体重的关联较弱,特别是对于与暴力相关的压力源。例如,在袭击发生率最高的四分位社区中,NO每增加1个IQR,平均出生体重仅降低7.3克,而在袭击发生率最低的四分位社区中为16.9克(四分位数间趋势p = 0.01)。暴露于非暴力压力源与较低的出生体重无显著关联,也未改变观察到的NO与出生体重的关联。
我们发现NO或社区压力源较高时,足月婴儿出生体重显著降低。然而,与假设相反的是,在压力源暴露非常高的社区(尤其是暴力犯罪)中,尽管总体出生体重较低,但NO与出生体重的关联比低压力社区弱。我们的结果表明在压力 - 污染相互作用中可能存在饱和效应,即非常高的压力源暴露似乎会抵消污染的任何影响。此外,与其他社会压力源相比,我们观察到暴力犯罪的影响更强。