AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examined how various environmental contaminants affect fetal growth by analyzing a large dataset of mother-child pairs across Europe.
  • Using advanced statistical models, the research identified lead exposure as a significant factor linked to reduced birth weight, while other contaminants showed negative or unclear associations.
  • This comprehensive approach highlights the importance of addressing multiple exposures simultaneously and suggests that lead and parabens might still pose health risks deserving further research.

Article Abstract

Background: Several environmental contaminants were shown to possibly influence fetal growth, generally from single exposure family studies, which are prone to publication bias and confounding by co-exposures. The exposome paradigm offers perspectives to avoid selective reporting of findings and to control for confounding by co-exposures. We aimed to characterize associations of fetal growth with the pregnancy chemical and external exposomes.

Methods: Within the Human Early-Life Exposome project, 131 prenatal exposures were assessed using biomarkers and environmental models in 1287 mother-child pairs from six European cohorts. We investigated their associations with fetal growth using a deletion-substitution-addition (DSA) algorithm considering all exposures simultaneously, and an exposome-wide association study (ExWAS) considering each exposure independently. We corrected for exposure measurement error and tested for exposure-exposure and sex-exposure interactions.

Results: The DSA model identified lead blood level, which was associated with a 97 g birth weight decrease for each doubling in lead concentration. No exposure passed the multiple testing-corrected significance threshold of ExWAS; without multiple testing correction, this model was in favour of negative associations of lead, fine particulate matter concentration and absorbance with birth weight, and of a positive sex-specific association of parabens with birth weight in boys. No two-way interaction between exposure variables was identified.

Conclusions: This first large-scale exposome study of fetal growth simultaneously considered >100 environmental exposures. Compared with single exposure studies, our approach allowed making all tests (usually reported in successive publications) explicit. Lead exposure is still a health concern in Europe and parabens health effects warrant further investigation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7266545PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ije/dyaa017DOI Listing

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