1. Identifying critical windows of susceptibility to perinatal lead exposure on child serum vaccine antibody levels.
- Author
-
Colicino E, Feiler MO, Austin C, Rosa MJ, McRae N, Quataert SA, Thevenet-Morrison K, Téllez-Rojo MM, Lamadrid-Figueroa H, Tavarez ZQ, Shim YK, Arora M, Wright RO, and Jusko TA
- Abstract
Background: Mounting evidence suggests that early-life lead exposure alters immune system functions, including T-cell dependent antibody responses to childhood immunizations. However, no studies have identified critical windows of susceptibility to lead exposure., Aim: To identify perinatal critical windows of lead exposure that are associated with antibody responses to anti-MMR (anti-measles, -mumps, and -rubella virus) and anti-DTP (anti-diphtheria, -tetanus, and -pertussis toxoids) vaccinations in Hispanic school-aged (mean± standard deviation: 4.8±0.6 years) children., Methods: Weekly lead exposure-from 16 weeks before to 14 weeks after birth-was measured in deciduous teeth from 271 children enrolled in the PROGRESS study. Serum levels of anti-MMR and anti-DTP antibodies were measured by a Luminex-multiplexed-microbead-array immunoassay. Time-varying associations between log2-transformed dentine lead concentrations and log2-transformed antibody levels were estimated by fitting distributed lag non-linear models., Results: A two-fold higher dentine lead concentration in the first three weeks postpartum was associated with an average -4.29% lower anti-tetanus level (95%confidence interval(CI):-8.22,-0.20). A perinatal (one week before to one week after birth) critical window of lead exposure demonstrated an average -3.44% (95%CI:-7.05;0.30) lower anti-diphtheria antibody level., Conclusions: Our study suggests that early-life lead exposure may contribute to immune dysfunction by reducing children's antibody responses to scheduled vaccinations., (© The Author(s) 2025. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF