학술논문

Association of prenatal exposure to ambient air pollution with adverse birth outcomes and effect modification by socioeconomic factors
Document Type
article
Source
Environmental Research. 212(Pt E)
Subject
Environmental Sciences
Climate-Related Exposures and Conditions
Conditions Affecting the Embryonic and Fetal Periods
Clinical Research
Preterm
Low Birth Weight and Health of the Newborn
Pediatric
Perinatal Period - Conditions Originating in Perinatal Period
Infant Mortality
2.2 Factors relating to the physical environment
Aetiology
Reproductive health and childbirth
Good Health and Well Being
Air Pollutants
Air Pollution
Birth Weight
Cohort Studies
Female
Fetal Growth Retardation
Humans
Infant
Newborn
Male
Maternal Exposure
Particulate Matter
Pregnancy
Premature Birth
Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects
Socioeconomic Factors
Airpollution
Fineparticulatematter
Birthoutcomes
Pretermbirth
Birthweight
Prenatalexposure
Effectmodification
Air pollution
Birth outcomes
Effect modification
Fine particulate matter
Prenatal exposure
Preterm birth
Chemical Sciences
Biological Sciences
Toxicology
Biological sciences
Chemical sciences
Environmental sciences
Language
Abstract
BackgroundMaternal exposure to air pollution has been associated with birth outcomes; however, few studies examined biologically critical exposure windows shorter than trimesters or potential effect modifiers.ObjectivesTo examine associations of prenatal fine particulate matter (PM2.5), by trimester and in biologically critical windows, with birth outcomes and assess potential effect modifiers.MethodsThis study used two pregnancy cohorts (CANDLE and TIDES; N = 2099) in the ECHO PATHWAYS Consortium. PM2.5 was estimated at the maternal residence using a fine-scale spatiotemporal model, averaged over pregnancy, trimesters, and critical windows (0-2 weeks, 10-12 weeks, and last month of pregnancy). Outcomes were preterm birth (PTB,