Del Carretto Michelle, Godin Audrey, Neves Danielson, Paixão Enny S, Wan Kai, Pescarini Julia, Ferreira Andrêa, Cortes Taísa R, Smeeth Liam, Barreto Maurício L, Brickley Elizabeth B, Part Chérie
Faculty of Epidemiology and Population Health, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, United Kingdom.
Centro de Integração de Dados e Conhecimentos para Saúde, Fundação Oswaldo Cruz, Salvador, Brasil.
PLOS Glob Public Health. 2025 Sep 5;5(9):e0004557. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgph.0004557. eCollection 2025.
Exposure to high ambient temperatures near the time of delivery has been associated with adverse birth outcomes, but studies examining the impact on immediate newborn health remain limited. We used a time-stratified case-crossover design combined with a distributed lag nonlinear model to evaluate the short-term effects of ambient heat (0-1 day lag) on low 5-minute APGAR score (≤7; sub-categories: 6-7, 3-5, 0-2). Cases of low APGAR score among low-risk births (n = 34,980) in São Paulo state (274 municipalities), 2013-2019, were extracted from Brazil's Live Birth Information System (Sistema de Informações Sobre Nascidos Vivos). Municipality-level daily mean temperatures were constructed from ERA5-Land reanalysis data and linked with case and control days by date and municipality of delivery. Models were adjusted for relative humidity and stratified by maternal age, race/ethnicity, education, parity, timing of prenatal care initiation, infant sex, municipality-level deprivation, and Köppen climate zone. Overall, exposure to high (95th percentile: 26.1°C) versus moderate (50th percentile: 20.9°C) temperature 0-1 days before delivery was associated with 8% higher odds (OR: 1.08, 95% CI: 1.02-1.14) of low APGAR score (≤7). In stratified analyses, heat-associated risks were elevated among infants born to women with <12 years of schooling (1.10, 1.03-1.17) and/or self-identifying as Brown/Parda (1.10, 1.01-1.20). Associations were primarily driven by same-day (lag 0) exposure and were only observed in newborns with moderately low APGAR scores (6-7). Acute exposure to ambient heat may adversely impact newborns' immediate health in low-risk live-births, highlighting the need for heat mitigation measures near the time of delivery.
分娩前后暴露于高温环境与不良出生结局有关,但考察其对新生儿即时健康影响的研究仍然有限。我们采用时间分层病例交叉设计并结合分布滞后非线性模型,以评估环境高温(滞后0 - 1天)对5分钟阿氏评分低(≤7分;子类别:6 - 7分、3 - 5分、0 - 2分)的短期影响。2013 - 2019年圣保罗州(274个市)低风险分娩中阿氏评分低的病例(n = 34,980),从巴西活产信息系统(Sistema de Informações Sobre Nascidos Vivos)中提取。市一级的日平均温度根据ERA5 - Land再分析数据构建,并通过分娩日期和市与病例日和对照日相联系。模型针对相对湿度进行了调整,并按产妇年龄、种族/族裔、教育程度、产次、产前护理开始时间、婴儿性别、市一级贫困程度和柯本气候带进行分层。总体而言,分娩前0 - 1天暴露于高温(第95百分位数:26.1°C)与中度温度(第50百分位数:20.9°C)相比,阿氏评分低(≤7分)的几率高8%(比值比:1.08,95%置信区间:1.02 - 1.14)。在分层分析中,受教育年限<12年的妇女所生婴儿(1.10,1.03 - 1.17)和/或自我认定为棕色人种/帕尔达种族的妇女所生婴儿(1.10,1.01 - 1.20)中,与高温相关的风险升高。关联主要由当日(滞后0天)暴露驱动,且仅在阿氏评分中度偏低(6 - 7分)的新生儿中观察到。急性暴露于环境高温可能对低风险活产新生儿的即时健康产生不利影响,凸显了在分娩前后采取减轻高温影响措施的必要性。