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Relationship between maternal exposure to bisphenol S and pregnancy duration
2018
Wan, Yanjian | Huo, Wenqian | Xu, Shunqing | Zheng, Tongzhang | Zhang, Bin | Li, Yuanyuan | Zhou, Aifen | Zhang, Yiming | Hu, Jie | Zhu, Yingshuang | Chen, Zhong | Lu, Shi | Wu, Chuansha | Jiang, Minmin | Jiang, Yangqian | Liu, Hongxiu | Yang, Xueyu | Xia, Wei
Bisphenol S (BPS) has been progressively used due to the potential safety problems of bisphenol A (BPA). Thus Human studies are needed to investigate the developmental effects of BPS. In this study, the impact of maternal BPS exposure on birth outcomes was evaluated with linear and logistic regression models. BPS was analyzed in spot urine samples collected from 985 pregnant women at admission to labor. It was found in 93.7% of the urine samples with the specific gravity adjusted geometric mean concentration of 0.17 μg/L. One ln-unit increase in urinary BPS was associated with a 0.72-day increase in pregnancy duration (95% CI: 0.34, 1.09). When stratified by fetal sex, each ln-unit increase in maternal urinary BPS was significantly correlated with increased gestational age [adjusted β = 1.02, 95% confidence intervals (CI): 0.47, 1.57] and increased odds of late term birth [adjusted odds ratio = 1.29, 95% CI: 1.00, 1.67] for girls, but not significantly for boys. Including maternal urinary BPA and BPS in one model did not change the results. Associations of BPS with birth weight or length were not observed. This is the first report about BPS exposure for pregnant women from China. Higher maternal urinary BPS concentrations were associated with increased gestational age, suggesting maternal BPS exposure may interfere with pregnancy duration. The findings require replication but reveal the probable risks posed by the developmental BPS exposure.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Maternal arsenic exposure and birth outcomes: A birth cohort study in Wuhan, China
2018
Liu, Hongxiu | Lu, Shi | Zhang, Bin | Xia, Wei | Liu, Wenyu | Peng, Yang | Zhang, Hongling | Wu, Kangbing | Xu, Shunqing | Li, Yuanyuan
Maternal arsenic exposure leads to adverse birth outcomes, but the critical window of this susceptibility keeps unclear. To determine whether the associations between maternal arsenic exposure and birth outcomes were trimester-specific, we conducted a birth cohort study of 1390 women from 2014 to 2016 in Wuhan, China. We examined associations between total urinary arsenic concentrations in three trimesters and birth weight, birth length and the risk of small for gestational age (SGA), and the differences of these associations across trimesters using generalized estimating equations. Maternal urinary arsenic concentrations varied across trimesters and were weakly correlated. Arsenic concentrations in the 3rd trimester, but not in the 1st and 2nd trimesters, were associated with birth outcomes. For each doubling of arsenic levels in the 3rd trimester, birth weight was decreased 24.27 g (95% confidence interval (CI): −46.99, −1.55), birth length was decreased 0.13 cm (95% CI: −0.22, −0.04), and the risk for SGA birth was increased 25% (95% CI: 1.03, 1.49). Further, stratified analyses indicated that these associations were only observed in female infants. Our findings indicate maternal arsenic levels in the 3rd trimester seemed to have significant impacts on birth outcomes, and also emphasize the public health interventions relevance to arsenic exposure in late pregnancy.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Prenatal exposure to polychlorinated biphenyl and umbilical cord hormones and birth outcomes in an island population
2018
Tang, Mengling | Yin, Shanshan | Zhang, Jianyun | Chen, Kun | Jin, Mingjuan | Liu, Weiping
Prenatal exposure to polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) is suspected to interfere with fetal development including reproductive and thyroid function and birth outcomes, but published evidence are still sparse. We designed a cross-sectional study to analyze the associations between PCB levels in umbilical cord sera and hormones and birth outcomes of mothers and newborns who are residents from an island. Seven indicator-PCB (PCB-28, 52, 101, 118, 138, 153, 180), and five reproductive hormones including luteotropic hormones (LH), estradiol (E2), testosterone (T), follicle-stimulating hormones (FSH) and anti-Mullerian hormones (AMH), and three thyroid hormones including tri-iodothyronine (T3), tetra-iodothyronine (T4) and thyroid stimulating hormones (TSH) were measured in 106 cord sera specimens. Birth outcomes include birth weight, length, head circumference, and gestational age. Multiple linear regression and quartile regression were used to analyze the associations between PCB and each of the hormones and birth outcomes, adjusting for selected potential confounders. The median value of total PCB in umbilical cord sera was 2.02 μg L−1 (IQR, 1.13–4.64). Several negative associations between PCB exposure and reproductive hormones were found. Among them, the β value of PCB-101 for FSH reached −0.38 (95%CI, −0.69, −0.07; p = 0.02). Moreover, we also found some sex-specific associations i.e. PCB-28 was negatively correlated with LH and T and PCB-118 was negatively correlated with T in male newborns but not in female newborns. The associations between PCB and birth outcomes seem to differ by molecular weight of the PCB congeners i.e. the low-chlorinated PCB congeners were negatively associated with gestational age and head circumference while high-chlorinated PCB congeners were positively associated birth weight and gestational age. In this study, we found that PCB congeners with different molecular weight has different associations with hormones and birth outcomes, and future studies are recommended to investigate underlying mechanisms of these associations.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]PM2.5 exposure during pregnancy induces hypermethylation of estrogen receptor promoter region in rat uterus and declines offspring birth weights
2018
Dang, Shaokang | Ding, Ding | Lu, Yong | Su, Qian | Lin, Tianwei | Zhang, Xiaojiao | Zhang, Huiping | Wang, Xuebin | Tan, Houzhang | Zhu, Zhongliang | Li, Hui
Particulate matter 2.5 (PM₂.₅) exposures during pregnancy could lead to declined birth weight, intrauterine developmental restriction, and premature delivery, however, the underlying mechanisms are still not elucidated. There are few studies concerning the effects of PM₂.₅ exposure on maternal and child health in Xi'an (one of the cities with severe air pollution of PM₂.₅ in North China). Then, this study aimed to investigate the effect of PM₂.₅ exposure in Xi'an on the offspring birth weights and the possibly associated epigenetic mechanisms. We found the Low and High groups: the offspring with declined birth weights; the decreased mRNA and protein expression of the estrogen receptor (ERs) and eNOs in the uterus; the decreased endometria vascular diameter maximum (EVDM); the increased mRNA and protein expressions of the DNMT1 and 3b in the uterus; the elevated methylation levels of the CpG sites in the CpG island of ERα promoter region in the uterus. However, no differences were observed in the mRNA or protein expressions of ERβ and DNMT3a between the Clean and PM₂.₅ exposure groups, as well as endometriavascular density (EVD). Additionally, PM₂.₅ level was negatively correlated with the ERα protein expression, EVDM and offspring birth weight, as well as the methylation level of the CpG sites in the CpG island of ERα promoter region and the ERα protein expression in the uterus; whereas the ERα protein expression was positively correlated with the offspring birth weight, as well as PM₂.₅ level and the methylation level of the CpG sites in the CpG island of ERα promoter region in the uterus. Taken together, elevated methylation level of the CpG sites in the CpG island of ERα promoter region reduces ERα expression in the uterus, which could be one of the epigenetic mechanisms that pregnant PM₂.₅ exposure reduces the offspring birth weights.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Effect modification of CPY2E1 and GSTZ1 genetic polymorphisms on associations between prenatal disinfection by-products exposure and birth outcomes
2018
Zhou, Bin | Yang, Pan | Gong, Ya-Jie | Zeng, Qiang | Lu, Wen-Qing | Miao, Xiao-Ping
Prenatal disinfection by-products (DBPs) exposure is linked with adverse birth outcomes. Genetic susceptibility to DBP metabolism may modify the exposure-outcome associations.To investigate whether CYP2E1 and GSTZ1 genetic polymorphisms modified the associations of prenatal DBP exposures with adverse birth outcomes.Two biomarkers of DBP exposures including trihalomethanes (THMs) in blood and trichloroacetic acid (TCAA) in urine were determined among 426 pregnant women from a Chinese cohort study. CYP2E1 (rs2031920, rs3813867, and rs915906) and GSTZ1 (rs7975) polymorphisms in cord blood were genotyped. Statistical interactions between prenatal DBP exposures and newborns CYP2E1 and GSTZ1 polymorphisms on birth outcomes (birth weight, birth length, and gestational age) were examined by multivariable linear regression with adjustment for potential confounders.We found that newborns CYP2E1 genetic polymorphisms (rs2031920 and rs3813867) modified the associations of maternal blood THMs or urinary TCAA levels with birth outcomes. However, these interactions were nonsignificant after Bonferroni correction for multiple comparisons, except for the interaction between maternal blood BrTHMs [sum of dibromochloromethane (DBCM), bromodichloromethane (BDCM), and bromoform (TBM)] and newborns CYP2E1 gene rs2031920 polymorphisms on birth weight (P for interaction = 0.003).Newborns genetic variations of CYP2E1 rs2031920 may modify the impacts of prenatal BrTHM exposure on birth weight. This finding needs to be further confirmed.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Modelling local uncertainty in relations between birth weight and air quality within an urban area: combining geographically weighted regression with geostatistical simulation
2018
Ribeiro, Manuel Castro | Pereira, Maria João
In this study, we combine known methods to present a new approach to assess local distributions of estimated parameters measuring associations between air quality and birth weight in the urban area of Sines (Portugal). To model exposure and capture short-distance variations in air quality, we use a Regression Kriging estimator combining air quality point data with land use auxiliary data. To assess uncertainty of exposure, the Kriging estimator is incorporated in a sequential Gaussian simulation algorithm (sGs) providing a set of simulated exposure maps with similar spatial structural dependence and statistical properties of observed data. Following the completion of the simulation runs, we fit a geographically weighted generalized linear model (GWGLM) for each mother’s place of residence, using observed health data and simulated exposure data, and repeat this procedure for each simulated map. Once the fit of GWGLM with all exposure maps is finished, we take the distribution of local estimated parameters measuring associations between exposure and birth weight, thus providing a measure of uncertainty in the local estimates. Results reveal that the distribution of local parameters did not vary substantially. Combining both methods (GWGLM and sGs), however, we are able to incorporate local uncertainty on the estimated associations providing an additional tool for analysis of the impacts of place in health.
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