2,675 results on '"Eskenazi, Brenda"'
Search Results
52. Association of pesticide exposure with neurobehavioral outcomes among avocado farmworkers in Mexico
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Rosa, Maria José, Armendáriz-Arnez, Cynthia, Gudayol-Ferré, Esteve, Prehn, Manuela, Fuhrimann, Samuel, Eskenazi, Brenda, Lindh, Christian H., and Mora, Ana M.
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- 2024
- Full Text
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53. Prenatal and childhood exposure to organophosphate pesticides and functional brain imaging in young adults
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Sagiv, Sharon K., Baker, Joseph M., Rauch, Stephen, Gao, Yuanyuan, Gunier, Robert B., Mora, Ana M., Kogut, Katherine, Bradman, Asa, Eskenazi, Brenda, and Reiss, Allan L.
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- 2024
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54. Maternal exposure to pyrethroid insecticides during pregnancy and respiratory allergy symptoms among children participating in the Venda Health Examination of Mothers, Babies and their Environment (VHEMBE)
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Elsiwi, Basant, Eskenazi, Brenda, Bornman, Riana, Obida, Muvhulawa, Kim, Joanne, Moodie, Erica EM., Mann, Koren K., and Chevrier, Jonathan
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- 2024
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55. Analysis of DNA methylation at birth and in childhood reveals changes associated with season of birth and latitude
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Kadalayil, Latha, Alam, Md. Zahangir, White, Cory Haley, Ghantous, Akram, Walton, Esther, Gruzieva, Olena, Merid, Simon Kebede, Kumar, Ashish, Roy, Ritu P., Solomon, Olivia, Huen, Karen, Eskenazi, Brenda, Rzehak, Peter, Grote, Veit, Langhendries, Jean-Paul, Verduci, Elvira, Ferre, Natalia, Gruszfeld, Darek, Gao, Lu, Guan, Weihua, Zeng, Xuehuo, Schisterman, Enrique F., Dou, John F., Bakulski, Kelly M., Feinberg, Jason I., Soomro, Munawar Hussain, Pesce, Giancarlo, Baiz, Nour, Isaevska, Elena, Plusquin, Michelle, Vafeiadi, Marina, Roumeliotaki, Theano, Langie, Sabine A. S., Standaert, Arnout, Allard, Catherine, Perron, Patrice, Bouchard, Luigi, van Meel, Evelien R., Felix, Janine F., Jaddoe, Vincent W. V., Yousefi, Paul D., Ramlau-Hansen, Cecilia H., Relton, Caroline L., Tobi, Elmar W., Starling, Anne P., Yang, Ivana V., Llambrich, Maria, Santorelli, Gillian, Lepeule, Johanna, Salas, Lucas A., Bustamante, Mariona, Ewart, Susan L., Zhang, Hongmei, Karmaus, Wilfried, Röder, Stefan, Zenclussen, Ana Claudia, Jin, Jianping, Nystad, Wenche, Page, Christian M., Magnus, Maria, Jima, Dereje D., Hoyo, Cathrine, Maguire, Rachel L., Kvist, Tuomas, Czamara, Darina, Räikkönen, Katri, Gong, Tong, Ullemar, Vilhelmina, Rifas-Shiman, Sheryl L., Oken, Emily, Almqvist, Catarina, Karlsson, Robert, Lahti, Jari, Murphy, Susan K., Håberg, Siri E., London, Stephanie, Herberth, Gunda, Arshad, Hasan, Sunyer, Jordi, Grazuleviciene, Regina, Dabelea, Dana, Steegers-Theunissen, Régine P. M., Nohr, Ellen A., Sørensen, Thorkild I. A., Duijts, Liesbeth, Hivert, Marie-France, Nelen, Vera, Popovic, Maja, Kogevinas, Manolis, Nawrot, Tim S., Herceg, Zdenko, Annesi-Maesano, Isabella, Fallin, M. Daniele, Yeung, Edwina, Breton, Carrie V., Koletzko, Berthold, Holland, Nina, Wiemels, Joseph L., Melén, Erik, Sharp, Gemma C., Silver, Matt J., Rezwan, Faisal I., and Holloway, John W.
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- 2023
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56. Preeclampsia and COVID-19: results from the INTERCOVID prospective longitudinal study.
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Papageorghiou, Aris T, Deruelle, Philippe, Gunier, Robert B, Rauch, Stephen, García-May, Perla K, Mhatre, Mohak, Usman, Mustapha Ado, Abd-Elsalam, Sherief, Etuk, Saturday, Simmons, Lavone E, Napolitano, Raffaele, Deantoni, Sonia, Liu, Becky, Prefumo, Federico, Savasi, Valeria, do Vale, Marynéa Silva, Baafi, Eric, Zainab, Ghulam, Nieto, Ricardo, Maiz, Nerea, Aminu, Muhammad Baffah, Cardona-Perez, Jorge Arturo, Craik, Rachel, Winsey, Adele, Tavchioska, Gabriela, Bako, Babagana, Oros, Daniel, Rego, Albertina, Benski, Anne Caroline, Hassan-Hanga, Fatimah, Savorani, Mónica, Giuliani, Francesca, Sentilhes, Loïc, Risso, Milagros, Takahashi, Ken, Vecchiarelli, Carmen, Ikenoue, Satoru, Thiruvengadam, Ramachandran, Soto Conti, Constanza P, Ferrazzi, Enrico, Cetin, Irene, Nachinab, Vincent Bizor, Ernawati, Ernawati, Duro, Eduardo A, Kholin, Alexey, Firlit, Michelle L, Easter, Sarah Rae, Sichitiu, Joanna, Bowale, Abimbola, Casale, Roberto, Cerbo, Rosa Maria, Cavoretto, Paolo Ivo, Eskenazi, Brenda, Thornton, Jim G, Bhutta, Zulfiqar A, Kennedy, Stephen H, and Villar, José
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Humans ,Pregnancy Complications ,Hypertension ,Pregnancy-Induced ,Pre-Eclampsia ,Premature Birth ,Pregnancy Outcome ,Risk Factors ,Longitudinal Studies ,Prospective Studies ,Pregnancy ,Adult ,Female ,COVID-19 ,SARS-CoV-2 ,SARS-CoV 2 ,aspirin ,cohort ,gestational hypertension ,hypertension ,hypertensive disorders in pregnancy ,infection ,morbidity ,mortality ,obesity ,overweight ,preeclampsia ,pregnancy ,preterm birth ,proteinuria ,relative risk ,renal disease ,risk ratio ,small for gestational age ,Cardiovascular ,Perinatal Period - Conditions Originating in Perinatal Period ,Contraception/Reproduction ,Clinical Research ,Preterm ,Low Birth Weight and Health of the Newborn ,Infant Mortality ,Hypertension ,Pediatric ,Reproductive health and childbirth ,Good Health and Well Being ,Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine ,Obstetrics & Reproductive Medicine - Abstract
BackgroundIt is unclear whether the suggested link between COVID-19 during pregnancy and preeclampsia is an independent association or if these are caused by common risk factors.ObjectiveThis study aimed to quantify any independent association between COVID-19 during pregnancy and preeclampsia and to determine the effect of these variables on maternal and neonatal morbidity and mortality.Study designThis was a large, longitudinal, prospective, unmatched diagnosed and not-diagnosed observational study assessing the effect of COVID-19 during pregnancy on mothers and neonates. Two consecutive not-diagnosed women were concomitantly enrolled immediately after each diagnosed woman was identified, at any stage during pregnancy or delivery, and at the same level of care to minimize bias. Women and neonates were followed until hospital discharge using the standardized INTERGROWTH-21st protocols and electronic data management system. A total of 43 institutions in 18 countries contributed to the study sample. The independent association between the 2 entities was quantified with the risk factors known to be associated with preeclampsia analyzed in each group. The outcomes were compared among women with COVID-19 alone, preeclampsia alone, both conditions, and those without either of the 2 conditions.ResultsWe enrolled 2184 pregnant women; of these, 725 (33.2%) were enrolled in the COVID-19 diagnosed and 1459 (66.8%) in the COVID-19 not-diagnosed groups. Of these women, 123 had preeclampsia of which 59 of 725 (8.1%) were in the COVID-19 diagnosed group and 64 of 1459 (4.4%) were in the not-diagnosed group (risk ratio, 1.86; 95% confidence interval, 1.32-2.61). After adjustment for sociodemographic factors and conditions associated with both COVID-19 and preeclampsia, the risk ratio for preeclampsia remained significant among all women (risk ratio, 1.77; 95% confidence interval, 1.25-2.52) and nulliparous women specifically (risk ratio, 1.89; 95% confidence interval, 1.17-3.05). There was a trend but no statistical significance among parous women (risk ratio, 1.64; 95% confidence interval, 0.99-2.73). The risk ratio for preterm birth for all women diagnosed with COVID-19 and preeclampsia was 4.05 (95% confidence interval, 2.99-5.49) and 6.26 (95% confidence interval, 4.35-9.00) for nulliparous women. Compared with women with neither condition diagnosed, the composite adverse perinatal outcome showed a stepwise increase in the risk ratio for COVID-19 without preeclampsia, preeclampsia without COVID-19, and COVID-19 with preeclampsia (risk ratio, 2.16; 95% confidence interval, 1.63-2.86; risk ratio, 2.53; 95% confidence interval, 1.44-4.45; and risk ratio, 2.84; 95% confidence interval, 1.67-4.82, respectively). Similar findings were found for the composite adverse maternal outcome with risk ratios of 1.76 (95% confidence interval, 1.32-2.35), 2.07 (95% confidence interval, 1.20-3.57), and 2.77 (95% confidence interval, 1.66-4.63). The association between COVID-19 and gestational hypertension and the direction of the effects on preterm birth and adverse perinatal and maternal outcomes, were similar to preeclampsia, but confined to nulliparous women with lower risk ratios.ConclusionCOVID-19 during pregnancy is strongly associated with preeclampsia, especially among nulliparous women. This association is independent of any risk factors and preexisting conditions. COVID-19 severity does not seem to be a factor in this association. Both conditions are associated independently of and in an additive fashion with preterm birth, severe perinatal morbidity and mortality, and adverse maternal outcomes. Women with preeclampsia should be considered a particularly vulnerable group with regard to the risks posed by COVID-19.
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- 2021
57. Latent profiles of children’s autonomic nervous system reactivity early in life predict later externalizing problems
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Roubinov, Danielle, Tein, Jenn‐Yun, Kogut, Katherine, Gunier, Robert, Eskenazi, Brenda, and Alkon, Abbey
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Psychology ,Applied and Developmental Psychology ,Pediatric ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Mind and Body ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Neurosciences ,Clinical Research ,autonomic nervous system ,early childhood ,externalizing problems ,growth mixture modeling ,physiological reactivity ,Cognitive Sciences ,Behavioral Science & Comparative Psychology ,Applied and developmental psychology ,Biological psychology - Abstract
Prior researchers have observed relations between children's autonomic nervous system reactivity and externalizing behavior problems, but rarely considers the role of developmentally regulated changes in children's stress response systems. Using growth mixture modeling, the present study derived profiles of parasympathetic nervous system reactivity (as indicated by respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA)) and sympathetic nervous system reactivity (as indicated by pre-ejection period (PEP)) from low income, primarily Mexican American children measured repeatedly from infancy through age 5 (N = 383) and investigated whether profiles were associated with externalizing problems at age 7. Analyses identified two profiles of RSA reactivity (reactive decreasing and U-shaped reactivity) and three profiles of PEP reactivity (blunted/anticipatory reactivity, reactive decreasing, non-reactive increasing). Compared to children with an RSA profile of reactive decreasing, those with an RSA profile of U-shaped reactivity had marginally higher externalizing problems, however, this difference was not statistically significant. Children who demonstrated a profile of blunted/anticipatory PEP reactivity had significantly higher externalizing problems compared to those with a profile of non-reactive increasing, likely related to the predominantly male composition of the former profile and predominantly female composition of the latter profile. Findings contribute to our understanding of developmental trajectories of ANS reactivity and highlight the utility of a longitudinal framework for understanding the effects of physiological risk factors on later behavior problems.
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- 2021
58. Exposure to obesogenic endocrine disrupting chemicals and obesity among youth of Latino or Hispanic origin in the United States and Latin America: A lifecourse perspective
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Perng, Wei, Cantoral, Alejandra, Soria‐Contreras, Diana C, Betanzos‐Robledo, Larissa, Kordas, Katarzyna, Liu, Yun, Mora, Ana M, Corvalan, Camila, Pereira, Anita, Cardoso, Marly Augusto, Chavarro, Jorge E, Breton, Carrie V, Meeker, John D, Harley, Kim G, Eskenazi, Brenda, Peterson, Karen E, and Tellez‐Rojo, Martha Maria
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Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Pediatric ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Prevention ,Obesity ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Child ,Endocrine Disruptors ,Hispanic or Latino ,Humans ,Latin America ,Pediatric Obesity ,United States ,child health ,lifecourse epidemiology ,obesity ,obesogenic endocrine disrupting chemicals ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Endocrinology & Metabolism ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences ,Psychology - Abstract
Following a 2019 workshop led by the Center for Global Health Studies at the Fogarty International Center on the topic of childhood obesity prevention and research synergies transpiring from cross-border collaborations, we convened a group of experts in the United States and Latin America to conduct a narrative review of the epidemiological literature on the role of obesogenic endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs) in the etiology of childhood obesity among Latino youth in the United States and Latin America. In addition to summarizing and synthesizing results from research on this topic published within the last decade, we place the findings within a lifecourse biobehavioral framework to aid in identification of unique exposure-outcome relationships driven by both biological and behavioral research, identify inconsistencies and deficiencies in current literature, and discuss the role of policy regulations, all with the goal of identifying viable avenues for prevention of early life obesity in Latino/Hispanic populations.
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- 2021
59. COVID-19 and children's health in the United States: Consideration of physical and social environments during the pandemic
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Suarez-Lopez, Jose R, Cairns, Maryann R, Sripada, Kam, Quiros-Alcala, Lesliam, Mielke, Howard W, Eskenazi, Brenda, Etzel, Ruth A, Kordas, Katarzyna, and Health and the Environment, on behalf of the International Society for Children's
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Biological Sciences ,Environmental Sciences ,Chemical Sciences ,Pediatric Research Initiative ,Prevention ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Pediatric ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Good Health and Well Being ,COVID-19 ,Child ,Child Health ,Humans ,Pandemics ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Social Environment ,United States ,Children ,Environment ,Social ,Physical ,International Society for Children's Health and the Environment ,Toxicology ,Biological sciences ,Chemical sciences ,Environmental sciences - Abstract
Public health measures necessary to counteract the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic have resulted in dramatic changes in the physical and social environments within which children grow and develop. As our understanding of the pathways for viral exposure and associated health outcomes in children evolves, it is critical to consider how changes in the social, cultural, economic, and physical environments resulting from the pandemic could affect the development of children. This review article considers the environments and settings that create the backdrop for children's health in the United States during the COVID-19 pandemic, including current threats to child development that stem from: A) change in exposures to environmental contaminants such as heavy metals, pesticides, disinfectants, air pollution and the built environment; B) changes in food environments resulting from adverse economic repercussion of the pandemic and limited reach of existing safety nets; C) limited access to children's educational and developmental resources; D) changes in the social environments at the individual and household levels, and their interplay with family stressors and mental health; E) social injustice and racism. The environmental changes due to COVID-19 are overlaid onto existing environmental and social disparities. This results in disproportionate effects among children in low-income settings and among populations experiencing the effects of structural racism. This article draws attention to many environments that should be considered in current and future policy responses to protect children's health amid pandemics.
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- 2021
60. Organophosphate pesticide exposure during pregnancy and childhood and onset of juvenile delinquency by age 16 years: The CHAMACOS cohort
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Vernet, Celine, Johnson, Megan, Kogut, Katherine, Hyland, Carly, Deardorff, Julianna, Bradman, Asa, and Eskenazi, Brenda
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Biological Sciences ,Environmental Sciences ,Chemical Sciences ,Endocrine Disruptors ,Conditions Affecting the Embryonic and Fetal Periods ,Pediatric ,Minority Health ,Women's Health ,Clinical Research ,Health Disparities ,Social Determinants of Health ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Reproductive health and childbirth ,Adolescent ,Child ,Environmental Exposure ,Female ,Humans ,Juvenile Delinquency ,Maternal Exposure ,Organophosphates ,Organophosphorus Compounds ,Pesticides ,Pregnancy ,Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects ,Organophosphate ,Pregnancy exposure ,Childhood exposure ,Delinquency ,Adolescence ,Toxicology ,Biological sciences ,Chemical sciences ,Environmental sciences - Abstract
BackgroundThough prenatal organophosphate pesticide (OP) exposure has been associated with lower intellectual quotient and behavioral disorders in childhood, factors related to later delinquency, no research has directly evaluated the impact of OPs on delinquency.ObjectiveTo evaluate the association between prenatal and childhood OP exposure and juvenile delinquency in Mexican-American youth in the Center for Health Assessment of Mothers and Children of Salinas (CHAMACOS).MethodsWe measured dialkyl phosphate (DAPs) urinary metabolites of OPs in two prenatal maternal samples and in five child samples collected between six months and five years of age. Youth completed delinquency questionnaires at 16 years. We examined associations of prenatal and childhood DAPs with several delinquency outcomes (n = 313) using survival and generalized linear models.ResultsAlmost 60% of youth reported delinquent acts (mostly minor), and 8% reported a police arrest. We observed largely null results of prenatal or childhood DAP concentrations and delinquency outcomes, with some isolated associations. A ten-fold increase in maternal dimethylphosphate (DM) concentrations measured after 20 weeks gestation was associated with an earlier age of first delinquent act (Hazard Ratio = 1.38, 95% CI: 1.01, 1.88) and an increased Odds Ratio (OR) of having committed 1-3 or ≥4 delinquent acts, compared to the no delinquency reference group (OR = 1.77, 95% CI: 1.01-3.08 and 2.17, 95% CI: 1.13-4.17, respectively). Higher childhood diethylphosphate (DE) concentrations were associated with a later age of first delinquent act (HR: 0.67; 95% CI: 0.46-0.97).DiscussionWe did not find strong evidence of association between prenatal or childhood OP exposure and juvenile delinquency in the present cohort. There is an increasing literature that relates OP exposure to neurobehavioral impairments in childhood, and there is a need to understand long-term potential neurodevelopmental effects of early-life OP exposure.
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- 2021
61. Associations between pesticide mixtures applied near home during pregnancy and early childhood with adolescent behavioral and emotional problems in the CHAMACOS study.
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Hyland, Carly, Bradshaw, Patrick T, Gunier, Robert B, Mora, Ana M, Kogut, Katherine, Deardorff, Julianna, Sagiv, Sharon K, Bradman, Asa, and Eskenazi, Brenda
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Adolescent health ,Bayesian methods ,Children’s health ,Glyphosate ,Neonicotinoids ,Neurodevelopment ,Organophosphates ,Pesticides - Abstract
Studies suggest that exposure to pesticides during pregnancy and early childhood is associated with adverse child neurodevelopment. Research to date has focused primarily on exposure to single pesticides or pesticide classes in isolation; there are little data on the effect of exposure to pesticide mixtures on child and adolescent neurodevelopment.MethodsUsing California's Pesticide Use Reporting database, we estimated agricultural pesticide use within 1 km of the home during the prenatal and postnatal (ages 0-5 years) periods among participants in the Center for the Health Assessment for Mothers and Children of Salinas (CHAMACOS) birth cohort. We implemented a Bayesian Hierarchical linear mixed-effects model to examine associations with maternal- and youth-reported behavioral and emotional problems from the Behavior Assessment System for Children, 2nd edition (BASC-2) at ages 16 and 18 years (n = 593).ResultsWe observed mostly null associations between pesticide applications and neurobehavioral outcomes. There were some trends of modestly increased internalizing behaviors and attention problems in association with organophosphate insecticide use near the home during the prenatal period. In the postnatal period, a two-fold increase in glyphosate applications was associated with more youth-reported depression (β = 1.2, 95% credible intervals [CrI] = 0.2, 2.2), maternal-reported internalizing behaviors (β = 1.23, 95% CrI = 0.2, 2.3), and anxiety (β = 1.2, 95% CrI = 0.2, 2.3). We observed some protective associations with imidacloprid during the prenatal period, particularly in sex-specific analyses.ConclusionsWe found only some subtle associations between some pesticides and neurobehavioral outcomes. This study extends previous work by considering potential exposure to mixtures of pesticides.
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- 2021
62. Prenatal air pollution exposure and neurodevelopment: A review and blueprint for a harmonized approach within ECHO
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Volk, Heather E, Perera, Frederica, Braun, Joseph M, Kingsley, Samantha L, Gray, Kimberly, Buckley, Jessie, Clougherty, Jane E, Croen, Lisa A, Eskenazi, Brenda, Herting, Megan, Just, Allan C, Kloog, Itai, Margolis, Amy, McClure, Leslie A, Miller, Rachel, Levine, Sarah, Wright, Rosalind, and Outcomes, Environmental influences on Child Health
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Biological Sciences ,Environmental Sciences ,Chemical Sciences ,Neurosciences ,Pediatric ,Climate-Related Exposures and Conditions ,Social Determinants of Health ,Women's Health ,Prevention ,Conditions Affecting the Embryonic and Fetal Periods ,Clinical Research ,Mental Health ,Aetiology ,2.2 Factors relating to the physical environment ,Good Health and Well Being ,Air Pollutants ,Air Pollution ,Autism Spectrum Disorder ,Child ,Child Health ,Environmental Exposure ,Female ,Humans ,Intelligence ,Particulate Matter ,Pregnancy ,Air pollution ,Neurodevelopment ,Prenatal exposure ,Brain ,Environmental influences on Child Health Outcomes ,Toxicology ,Biological sciences ,Chemical sciences ,Environmental sciences - Abstract
BackgroundAir pollution exposure is ubiquitous with demonstrated effects on morbidity and mortality. A growing literature suggests that prenatal air pollution exposure impacts neurodevelopment. We posit that the Environmental influences on Child Health Outcomes (ECHO) program will provide unique opportunities to fill critical knowledge gaps given the wide spatial and temporal variability of ECHO participants.ObjectivesWe briefly describe current methods for air pollution exposure assessment, summarize existing studies of air pollution and neurodevelopment, and synthesize this information as a basis for recommendations, or a blueprint, for evaluating air pollution effects on neurodevelopmental outcomes in ECHO.MethodsWe review peer-reviewed literature on prenatal air pollution exposure and neurodevelopmental outcomes, including autism spectrum disorder, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, intelligence, general cognition, mood, and imaging measures. ECHO meta-data were compiled and evaluated to assess frequency of neurodevelopmental assessments and prenatal and infancy residential address locations. Cohort recruitment locations and enrollment years were summarized to examine potential spatial and temporal variation present in ECHO.DiscussionWhile the literature provides compelling evidence that prenatal air pollution affects neurodevelopment, limitations in spatial and temporal exposure variation exist for current published studies. As >90% of the ECHO cohorts have collected a prenatal or infancy address, application of advanced geographic information systems-based models for common air pollutant exposures may be ideal to address limitations of published research.ConclusionsIn ECHO we have the opportunity to pioneer unifying exposure assessment and evaluate effects across multiple periods of development and neurodevelopmental outcomes, setting the standard for evaluation of prenatal air pollution exposures with the goal of improving children's health.
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- 2021
63. The relationship between air pollutants and maternal socioeconomic factors on preterm birth in California urban counties.
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Mekonnen, Zesemayat K, Oehlert, John W, Eskenazi, Brenda, Shaw, Gary M, Balmes, John R, and Padula, Amy M
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Air pollution ,Ozone ,PM2.5 ,Preterm birth ,Socioeconomic status ,Epidemiology ,Chemical Sciences ,Environmental Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences - Abstract
BackgroundPreterm birth is the leading cause of perinatal morbidity and mortality in the U.S. and disparities among racial and ethnic groups persist. While etiologies of preterm birth have not been fully elucidated, it is probable that environmental and social factors play a role.ObjectiveWe hypothesized that there is an interactive association between exposure to fine particulate matter (PM2.5) or ozone (O3) and neighborhood socioeconomic factors that increase the risk of preterm birth.MethodsWe conducted a retrospective study using geocoded birth certificate data between 2007 and 2011, daily ambient air quality data on PM2.5 and O3, and American Community Survey (2007-2011 5-year estimates) data to assess census tract-level socioeconomic factors in California urban counties.ResultsOur study found a small positive association between maternal exposures to PM2.5 and O3 and preterm birth that varied by gestational exposure period. In mixed-effects models, we found an increase in the risk of preterm birth for a one-unit change in PM2.5 averaged across the entire pregnancy (AOR = 1.02, 95% CI: 1.01, 1.02) and O3 during 3-months pre-pregnancy (AOR = 1.03, 95% CI: 1.02, 1.04). Interaction between census tract-level factors and air pollutants showed an increase in the risk of preterm birth among mothers living in higher socioeconomic areas, though, a fixed cohort bias sensitivity analysis showed these associations were not significant.SignificanceThese findings substantiate previous studies that showed associations between air pollution and preterm birth, even as pollution levels have decreased. This study has important implications for policy decisions and may help inform research on potential mechanisms of preterm birth.
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- 2021
64. Prevalence and Clinical Profile of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 Infection among Farmworkers, California, USA, June–November 2020 - Volume 27, Number 5—May 2021 - Emerging Infectious Diseases journal - CDC
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Lewnard, Joseph A, Mora, Ana M, Nkwocha, Oguchi, Kogut, Katherine, Rauch, Stephen A, Morga, Norma, Hernandez, Samantha, Wong, Marcus P, Huen, Karen, Andrejko, Kristin, Jewell, Nicholas P, Parra, Kimberly L, Holland, Nina, Harris, Eva, Cuevas, Maximiliano, and Eskenazi, Brenda
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Emerging Infectious Diseases ,Clinical Research ,Lung ,Pneumonia ,Prevention ,Infectious Diseases ,Pneumonia & Influenza ,Vaccine Related ,Biodefense ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,COVID-19 ,California ,Farmers ,Humans ,Prevalence ,Prospective Studies ,SARS-CoV-2 ,United States ,CHAMACOS-Project-19 Study Team ,SARS ,Salinas Valley ,coronavirus ,coronavirus disease ,essential workers ,farmworkers ,infection prevalence ,respiratory infections ,serosurvey ,severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 ,viruses ,zoonoses ,Medical Microbiology ,Public Health and Health Services ,Microbiology ,Clinical sciences ,Epidemiology ,Health services and systems - Abstract
During the ongoing coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, farmworkers in the United States are considered essential personnel and continue in-person work. We conducted prospective surveillance for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection and antibody prevalence among farmworkers in Salinas Valley, California, during June 15-November 30, 2020. We observed 22.1% (1,514/6,864) positivity for SARS-CoV-2 infection among farmworkers compared with 17.2% (1,255/7,305) among other adults from the same communities (risk ratio 1.29, 95% CI 1.20-1.37). In a nested study enrolling 1,115 farmworkers, prevalence of current infection was 27.7% among farmworkers reporting >1 COVID-19 symptom and 7.2% among farmworkers without symptoms (adjusted odds ratio 4.16, 95% CI 2.85-6.06). Prevalence of SARS-CoV-2 antibodies increased from 10.5% (95% CI 6.0%-18.4%) during July 16-August 31 to 21.2% (95% CI 16.6%-27.4%) during November 1-30. High SARS-CoV-2 infection prevalence among farmworkers underscores the need for vaccination and other preventive interventions.
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- 2021
65. Fetal cranial growth trajectories are associated with growth and neurodevelopment at 2 years of age: INTERBIO-21st Fetal Study
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Villar, José, Gunier, Robert B, Tshivuila-Matala, Chrystelle OO, Rauch, Stephen A, Nosten, Francois, Ochieng, Roseline, Restrepo-Méndez, María C, McGready, Rose, Barros, Fernando C, Fernandes, Michelle, Carrara, Verena I, Victora, Cesar G, Munim, Shama, Craik, Rachel, Barsosio, Hellen C, Carvalho, Maria, Berkley, James A, Cheikh Ismail, Leila, Norris, Shane A, Ohuma, Eric O, Stein, Alan, Lambert, Ann, Winsey, Adele, Uauy, Ricardo, Eskenazi, Brenda, Bhutta, Zulfiqar A, Papageorghiou, Aris T, and Kennedy, Stephen H
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Paediatrics ,Reproductive Medicine ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Perinatal Period - Conditions Originating in Perinatal Period ,Prevention ,Conditions Affecting the Embryonic and Fetal Periods ,Clinical Research ,Pediatric ,Neurosciences ,Reproductive health and childbirth ,Good Health and Well Being ,Cephalometry ,Child Development ,Female ,Fetus ,Humans ,Infant ,Infant ,Newborn ,Morbidity ,Pregnancy ,Skull ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Immunology ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
Many observational studies and some randomized trials demonstrate how fetal growth can be influenced by environmental insults (for example, maternal infections)1 and preventive interventions (for example, multiple-micronutrient supplementation)2 that can have a long-lasting effect on health, growth, neurodevelopment and even educational attainment and income in adulthood3. In a cohort of pregnant women (n = 3,598), followed-up between 2012 and 2019 at six sites worldwide4, we studied the associations between ultrasound-derived fetal cranial growth trajectories, measured longitudinally from
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- 2021
66. Prenatal exposure to phthalates and maternal metabolic outcomes in a high-risk pregnant Latina population
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Zukin, Helen, Eskenazi, Brenda, Holland, Nina, and Harley, Kim G
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Biological Sciences ,Environmental Sciences ,Chemical Sciences ,Endocrine Disruptors ,Women's Health ,Maternal Health ,Diabetes ,Perinatal Period - Conditions Originating in Perinatal Period ,Clinical Research ,Nutrition ,Maternal Morbidity and Mortality ,Pregnancy ,Pediatric ,Conditions Affecting the Embryonic and Fetal Periods ,Obesity ,Prevention ,Reproductive health and childbirth ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Good Health and Well Being ,Child ,Cohort Studies ,Female ,Hispanic or Latino ,Humans ,Maternal Exposure ,Phthalic Acids ,Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects ,Risk Factors ,Phthalates ,Endocrine disruptors ,Gestational diabetes ,Impaired glucose tolerance ,Gestational weight gain ,Toxicology ,Biological sciences ,Chemical sciences ,Environmental sciences - Abstract
BackgroundPhthalates are a group of endocrine disrupting chemicals that are heavily used throughout industry in flexible plastic and personal-care products. As a result, detectable levels of their metabolites are readily found in humans. Some studies have shown associations of phthalates with diabetes, but associations with gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) are less clear.ObjectiveTo investigate the association of 11 prenatal urinary phthalate metabolites and development of GDM, impaired glucose tolerance (IGT), continuous plasma glucose level, and excessive gestational weight gain (GWG) in a population of pregnant Latina women (N = 415) enrolled in the Center for the Health Assessment of Mothers and Children of Salinas (CHAMACOS) cohort study.MethodsPhthalate metabolite levels were measured via mass spectrometry from two urine samples collected in the end of the first and second trimester. Maternal plasma glucose levels, prior diabetes diagnosis, GDM diagnosis, and weight gain were abstracted from medical records. Multiple regression was used to evaluate the association between the average of the two urinary phthalate metabolites levels and maternal metabolic outcomes. In our sensitivity analysis, phthalate levels were categorized by level (as quartiles of exposure) and by timing of urine sample collection (as taken in first and second half of pregnancy).ResultsConsistent with findings from a nationally representative sample, all of the individual phthalate metabolites were detected in majority of mothers. Thirty-one mothers (7.5%) were diagnosed with GDM, 49 mothers (14.7%) displayed IGT, and 223 mothers (55.1%) gained an excessive amount of weight during their pregnancy. MEP concentrations were associated with an increased odds of excessive GWG (OR: 1.1, 95% CI: 1.0 to 1.3). We did not find an association between any phthalate metabolite and any maternal glucose outcome.ConclusionContrary to previous studies, our findings do not support an association of prenatal phthalate levels and increased odds for hyperglycemia, IGT, or GDM. But, we did find an increased odds of excessive GWG, a well-known risk factor for GDM.
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- 2021
67. Dioxin exposure associated with fecundability and infertility in mothers and daughters of Seveso, Italy
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Eskenazi, Brenda, Ames, Jennifer, Rauch, Stephen, Signorini, Stefano, Brambilla, Paolo, Mocarelli, Paolo, Siracusa, Claudia, Holland, Nina, and Warner, Marcella
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Infertility ,Contraception/Reproduction ,Prevention ,Agent Orange & Dioxin ,Reproductive health and childbirth ,Good Health and Well Being ,Animals ,Child ,Dioxins ,Female ,Fertility ,Humans ,Italy ,Male ,Mothers ,Nuclear Family ,Polychlorinated Dibenzodioxins ,Pregnancy ,Retrospective Studies ,female infertility ,environmental effects ,epidemiology ,dioxin ,fecundability ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Studies in Human Society ,Obstetrics & Reproductive Medicine - Abstract
Study questionIs there an association between 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD) exposure and fecundability and infertility among Seveso women and their daughters?Summary answerTCDD exposure is associated with a decrease in fecundability and increased risk of infertility in women, as well as their daughters.What is known alreadyIn animal studies, maternal exposure to TCDD is associated with decreased fertility in offspring. Effects of TCDD are mediated by activation of the aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AHR) pathway.Study design, size, durationThe Seveso Women's Health Study (SWHS) has followed 981 women exposed to TCDD in a 1976 accident since 1996. In 2014, we initiated the Seveso Second Generation Study to follow-up their children.Participants/materials, setting, methodsWe obtained information on pregnancy history including time of trying to conceive from SWHS women and their daughters who were 18 years or older. We considered TCDD exposure as initial 1976 serum TCDD concentration and estimated TCDD at pregnancy. We examined relationships of TCDD exposure with time to pregnancy (TTP, the monthly probability of conception within the first 12 months of trying) and infertility (≥12 months of trying to conceive). We also assessed contributions of polymorphisms in the AHR pathway via genetic risk score.Main results and the role of chanceAmong SWHS women (n = 446), median TTP was 3 months and 18% reported taking ≥12 months to conceive. Initial 1976 TCDD (log10) was associated with longer TTP (adjusted fecundability odds ratio = 0.82; 95% CI 0.68-0.98) and increased risk of infertility (adjusted relative risk = 1.35; 95% CI 1.01-1.79). TCDD at pregnancy yielded similar associations. Among SWHS daughters (n = 66), median TTP was 2 months and 11% reported taking ≥12 months to conceive. Daughters showed similar, but non-significant, associations with maternal TCDD exposure.Limitations, reasons for cautionA limitation of this study is time to pregnancy was reported retrospectively, although previous studies have found women are able to recall time to conception with a high degree of accuracy many years after the fact. The number of SWHS daughters who had a live birth was small and we were unable to examine fecundability of SWHS sons.Wider implications of the findingsConsistent with previous findings in animal studies, our study found that TCDD exposure may be associated with decreased fertility in Seveso mothers and potentially in their daughters exposed in utero. There may be susceptible genetic subgroups. The literature has largely considered the genetics of the AHR pathway in the context of male fertility but not female fertility, despite strong biological plausibility. These findings should be replicated in larger populations and of different ancestry. Future studies in Seveso should examine the sons and the grandchildren of exposed mothers given the animal literature suggesting potential heritable epigenetic effects.Study funding/competing interest(s)This study was supported by grant numbers F06 TW02075-01 from the National Institutes of Health, R01 ES07171 and 2P30-ESO01896-17 from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, R82471 from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and #2896 from Regione Lombardia and Fondazione Lombardia Ambiente, Milan, Italy. J.A. was supported by F31ES026488 from the National Institutes of Health. The authors declare they have no actual or potential competing financial interests.Trial registration numberN/A.
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- 2021
68. Prenatal Exposure to Mixtures of Phthalates, Parabens, and Other Phenols and Obesity in Five-Year-Olds in the CHAMACOS Cohort.
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Berger, Kimberly, Hyland, Carly, Ames, Jennifer L, Mora, Ana M, Huen, Karen, Eskenazi, Brenda, Holland, Nina, and Harley, Kim G
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Bayesian ,children’s health ,endocrine disruptors ,mixtures ,obesity ,parabens ,phenols ,phthalates ,children’ ,s health ,Toxicology - Abstract
Exposures to phthalates, parabens, and other phenols are often correlated due to their ubiquitous use in personal care products and plastics. Examining these compounds as a complex mixture may clarify inconsistent relationships between individual chemicals and childhood adiposity. Using data from the Center for the Health Assessment of Mothers and Children of Salinas (CHAMACOS) study, a longitudinal cohort of children in Salinas Valley, California (n = 309), we examined biomarkers of 11 phthalate metabolites and 9 phenols, including several parabens and bisphenol A, measured in maternal urine at two time points during pregnancy. We measured child height and weight at age five to calculate the body mass index (BMI) z-scores and overweight/obesity status. The association between prenatal urinary concentrations of biomarkers with the childhood BMI z-score and overweight/obesity status was analyzed using single-pollutant models and two mixture methods: Bayesian hierarchical modeling (BMH) and Bayesian kernel machine regression (BKMR). Urinary concentrations of monoethyl phthalate, monocarboxy-isononly phthalate (metabolites of diethyl phthalate and di-isodecyl phthalate, respectively), and propylparaben were consistently associated with an increased BMI z-score and overweight/obesity status across all modeling approaches. Higher prenatal exposures to the cumulative biomarker mixture also trended with greater childhood adiposity. These results, robust across two methods that control for co-pollutant confounding, suggest that prenatal exposure to certain phthalates and parabens may increase the risk for obesity in early childhood.
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- 2021
69. Transportation cost as a barrier to contraceptive use among women initiating treatment for HIV in Tanzania.
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Hunter, Lauren A, Prata, Ndola, Eskenazi, Brenda, Njau, Prosper F, and McCoy, Sandra I
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Humans ,HIV Infections ,Contraceptive Agents ,Female ,Anti-Retroviral Agents ,Contraception ,Antiretroviral Therapy ,Highly Active ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Condoms ,Contraception Behavior ,Transportation ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Middle Aged ,Health Services Needs and Demand ,Health Services Accessibility ,Tanzania ,Female ,Young Adult ,Food Insecurity ,HIV ,PMTCT ,food insecurity ,transportation ,Infectious Diseases ,Contraception/Reproduction ,Pediatric AIDS ,Clinical Research ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,Prevention ,Pediatric ,HIV/AIDS ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Public Health and Health Services ,Psychology ,Public Health - Abstract
Transportation cost is a barrier to HIV treatment, yet no studies have examined its association with contraceptive use among women living with HIV. We analyzed cross-sectional data from women attending three public healthcare facilities in Shinyanga, Tanzania where they initiated antiretroviral therapy for HIV infection in the previous 90 days; all facilities offered free contraception. Women self-reported current contraceptive use and the round-trip cost of transportation to the facility. Among 421 women aged 18-49, 86 (20.4%) were using any modern contraceptive method, of which half were using modern methods other than condoms. Women who paid more than 2,000 Tanzanian shillings for transportation had a significantly lower prevalence of any modern method use than women who paid nothing (9.1% vs. 21.3%; adjusted difference: -12.9; 95% confidence interval: -21.3, -4.4). A similar difference was observed for non-condom modern method use. We conclude that high transportation cost may impede contraceptive use even among women accessing HIV treatment.
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- 2021
70. Organophosphate pesticide dose estimation from spot and 24-hr urine samples collected from children in an agricultural community
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Hyland, Carly, Kogut, Katherine, Gunier, Robert B, Castorina, Rosemary, Curl, Cynthia, Eskenazi, Brenda, and Bradman, Asa
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Environmental Sciences ,Pollution and Contamination ,Pediatric ,Clinical Research ,Agriculture ,Child ,Environmental Exposure ,Humans ,Organophosphates ,Organophosphorus Compounds ,Pesticides ,Children ,Organophosphorus ,Dose estimation ,Risk assessment - Abstract
BackgroundSpot urine samples are often used to assess exposure to organophosphate (OP) pesticides in place of "gold standard" 24-hr samples, which are cumbersome to collect. Assessment of non-persistent chemicals using spot urine samples may result in exposure misclassification that could bias epidemiological analyses towards the null. Few studies have examined the validity of measurements of urinary metabolites in spot samples to estimate daily OP dose or the potential implications of reliance on spot samples for risk assessments.ObjectiveExamine the validity of using first morning void (FMV) and random non-FMV urine samples to estimate cumulative 24-hr OP pesticide dose among children living in an agricultural region.MethodsWe collected urine samples over 7 consecutive days, including two 24-hr samples, from 25 children living in an agricultural community. We used measurements of urinary dialkylphosphate (DAP) metabolites, data on nearby agricultural pesticide applications, and daily dietary intake data to estimate internal dose from exposure to a mixture of OP pesticides according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Cumulative Risk Assessment guidelines. Dose estimates from volume- and creatinine-adjusted same-day FMV and non-FMV spot urine samples were compared to the "gold standard" estimates from 24-hr samples.ResultsNon-FMV samples had relatively weak ability to predict 24-hr dose (R2 = 0.09-0.38 for total DAPs) and tended to underestimate the percentage of samples exceeding regulatory guidelines. Models with FMV samples or the average of an FMV and non-FMV sample were similarly predictive of 24-hr estimates (R2 for DAPs = 0.40-0.68 and 0.40-0.80, respectively, depending on volume adjustment method).ConclusionReliance on non-FMV samples for risk assessments may underestimate daily OP dose and the percentage of children with dose estimates exceeding regulatory guidelines. If 24-hr urine sample collection is infeasible, we recommend future studies prioritize the collection of FMV samples to most accurately characterize OP dose in children.
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- 2021
71. DNA methylation and body mass index from birth to adolescence: meta-analyses of epigenome-wide association studies
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Vehmeijer, Florianne OL, Küpers, Leanne K, Sharp, Gemma C, Salas, Lucas A, Lent, Samantha, Jima, Dereje D, Tindula, Gwen, Reese, Sarah, Qi, Cancan, Gruzieva, Olena, Page, Christian, Rezwan, Faisal I, Melton, Philip E, Nohr, Ellen, Escaramís, Geòrgia, Rzehak, Peter, Heiskala, Anni, Gong, Tong, Tuominen, Samuli T, Gao, Lu, Ross, Jason P, Starling, Anne P, Holloway, John W, Yousefi, Paul, Aasvang, Gunn Marit, Beilin, Lawrence J, Bergström, Anna, Binder, Elisabeth, Chatzi, Leda, Corpeleijn, Eva, Czamara, Darina, Eskenazi, Brenda, Ewart, Susan, Ferre, Natalia, Grote, Veit, Gruszfeld, Dariusz, Håberg, Siri E, Hoyo, Cathrine, Huen, Karen, Karlsson, Robert, Kull, Inger, Langhendries, Jean-Paul, Lepeule, Johanna, Magnus, Maria C, Maguire, Rachel L, Molloy, Peter L, Monnereau, Claire, Mori, Trevor A, Oken, Emily, Räikkönen, Katri, Rifas-Shiman, Sheryl, Ruiz-Arenas, Carlos, Sebert, Sylvain, Ullemar, Vilhelmina, Verduci, Elvira, Vonk, Judith M, Xu, Cheng-jian, Yang, Ivana V, Zhang, Hongmei, Zhang, Weiming, Karmaus, Wilfried, Dabelea, Dana, Muhlhausler, Beverly S, Breton, Carrie V, Lahti, Jari, Almqvist, Catarina, Jarvelin, Marjo-Riitta, Koletzko, Berthold, Vrijheid, Martine, Sørensen, Thorkild IA, Huang, Rae-Chi, Arshad, Syed Hasan, Nystad, Wenche, Melén, Erik, Koppelman, Gerard H, London, Stephanie J, Holland, Nina, Bustamante, Mariona, Murphy, Susan K, Hivert, Marie-France, Baccarelli, Andrea, Relton, Caroline L, Snieder, Harold, Jaddoe, Vincent WV, and Felix, Janine F
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Biological Sciences ,Genetics ,Pediatric ,Nutrition ,Prevention ,Human Genome ,Obesity ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,Aetiology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Cardiovascular ,Cancer ,Stroke ,Oral and gastrointestinal ,Adolescent ,Body Mass Index ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,CpG Islands ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,DNA Methylation ,Epigenesis ,Genetic ,Epigenome ,Female ,Fetal Blood ,Humans ,Male ,Parturition ,Pediatric Obesity ,Pregnancy ,Body mass index ,Childhood obesity ,DNA methylation ,Epigenetics ,Clinical Sciences - Abstract
BackgroundDNA methylation has been shown to be associated with adiposity in adulthood. However, whether similar DNA methylation patterns are associated with childhood and adolescent body mass index (BMI) is largely unknown. More insight into this relationship at younger ages may have implications for future prevention of obesity and its related traits.MethodsWe examined whether DNA methylation in cord blood and whole blood in childhood and adolescence was associated with BMI in the age range from 2 to 18 years using both cross-sectional and longitudinal models. We performed meta-analyses of epigenome-wide association studies including up to 4133 children from 23 studies. We examined the overlap of findings reported in previous studies in children and adults with those in our analyses and calculated enrichment.ResultsDNA methylation at three CpGs (cg05937453, cg25212453, and cg10040131), each in a different age range, was associated with BMI at Bonferroni significance, P
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- 2020
72. A framework for assessing the impact of chemical exposures on neurodevelopment in ECHO: Opportunities and challenges
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Schantz, Susan L, Eskenazi, Brenda, Buckley, Jessie P, Braun, Joseph M, Sprowles, Jenna N, Bennett, Deborah H, Cordero, Jose, Frazier, Jean A, Lewis, Johnnye, Hertz-Picciotto, Irva, Lyall, Kristen, Nozadi, Sara S, Sagiv, Sharon, Stroustrup, AnneMarie, Volk, Heather E, Watkins, Deborah J, and Outcomes, program collaborators for Environmental influences on Child Health
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Environmental Sciences ,Pollution and Contamination ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Women's Health ,Social Determinants of Health ,Clinical Research ,Prevention ,Endocrine Disruptors ,Pediatric ,Adolescent ,Child ,Child Health ,Child ,Preschool ,Cohort Studies ,Environmental Exposure ,Environmental Pollutants ,Female ,Halogenated Diphenyl Ethers ,Humans ,Organophosphorus Compounds ,Polychlorinated Biphenyls ,Pregnancy ,ECHO ,Neurodevelopment ,Prenatal chemical exposure ,Infancy ,Childhood ,program collaborators for Environmental influences on Child Health Outcomes ,Chemical Sciences ,Biological Sciences ,Toxicology ,Biological sciences ,Chemical sciences ,Environmental sciences - Abstract
The Environmental influences on Child Health Outcomes (ECHO) Program is a research initiative funded by the National Institutes of Health that capitalizes on existing cohort studies to investigate the impact of early life environmental factors on child health and development from infancy through adolescence. In the initial stage of the program, extant data from 70 existing cohort studies are being uploaded to a database that will be publicly available to researchers. This new database will represent an unprecedented opportunity for researchers to combine data across existing cohorts to address associations between prenatal chemical exposures and child neurodevelopment. Data elements collected by ECHO cohorts were determined via a series of surveys administered by the ECHO Data Analysis Center. The most common chemical classes quantified in multiple cohorts include organophosphate pesticides, polychlorinated biphenyls, polybrominated diphenyl ethers, environmental phenols (including bisphenol A), phthalates, and metals. For each of these chemicals, at least four ECHO cohorts also collected behavioral data during infancy/early childhood using the Child Behavior Checklist. For these chemicals and this neurodevelopmental assessment (as an example), existing data from multiple ECHO cohorts could be pooled to address research questions requiring larger sample sizes than previously available. In addition to summarizing the data that will be available, the article also describes some of the challenges inherent in combining existing data across cohorts, as well as the gaps that could be filled by the additional data collection in the ECHO Program going forward.
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- 2020
73. Prenatal phthalate, paraben, and phenol exposure and childhood allergic and respiratory outcomes: Evaluating exposure to chemical mixtures
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Berger, Kimberly, Coker, Eric, Rauch, Stephen, Eskenazi, Brenda, Balmes, John, Kogut, Katie, Holland, Nina, Calafat, Antonia M, and Harley, Kim
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Epidemiology ,Health Sciences ,Asthma ,Lung ,Women's Health ,Endocrine Disruptors ,Pediatric ,Clinical Research ,Prevention ,Respiratory ,Bayes Theorem ,Child ,Environmental Exposure ,Environmental Pollutants ,Female ,Humans ,Hypersensitivity ,Parabens ,Phenol ,Phenols ,Phthalic Acids ,Pregnancy ,Bayesian Kernel Machine Regression ,Bayesian Profile Regression ,Environmental Sciences - Abstract
BackgroundChemicals found in personal care products and plastics have been associated with asthma, allergies, and lung function, but methods to address real life exposure to mixtures of these chemicals have not been applied to these associations.MethodsWe quantified urinary concentrations of eleven phthalate metabolites, four parabens, and five other phenols in mothers twice during pregnancy and assessed probable asthma, aeroallergies, and lung function in their age seven children. We implemented Bayesian Profile Regression (BPR) to cluster women by their exposures to these chemicals and tested the clusters for differences in outcome measurements. We used Bayesian Kernel Machine Regression (BKMR) to fit biomarkers into one model as joint independent variables.ResultsBPR clustered women into seven groups characterized by patterns of personal care product and plastic use, though there were no significant differences in outcomes across clusters. BKMR showed that monocarboxyisooctyl phthalate and 2,4-dichlorophenol were associated with probable asthma (predicted probability of probable asthma per IQR of biomarker z-score (standard deviation) = 0.08 (0.09) and 0.11 (0.12), respectively) and poorer lung function (predicted probability per IQR = -0.07 (0.05) and -0.07 (0.06), respectively), and that mono(3-carboxypropyl) phthalate and bisphenol A were associated with aeroallergies (predicted probability per IQR = 0.13 (0.09) and 0.11 (0.08), respectively). Several biomarkers demonstrated positive additive effects on other associations.ConclusionsBPR and BKMR are useful tools to evaluate associations of biomarker concentrations within a mixture of exposure and should supplement single-chemical regression models when data allow.
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- 2020
74. Prenatal pesticide exposure and respiratory health outcomes in the first year of life: Results from the infants’ Environmental Health (ISA) study
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Mora, Ana M, Hoppin, Jane A, Córdoba, Leonel, Cano, Juan C, Soto-Martínez, Manuel, Eskenazi, Brenda, Lindh, Christian H, and van Wendel de Joode, Berna
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Lung ,Pediatric ,Conditions Affecting the Embryonic and Fetal Periods ,Prevention ,Clinical Research ,Aetiology ,2.2 Factors relating to the physical environment ,Reproductive health and childbirth ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Environmental Pollutants ,Ethylenethiourea ,Female ,Humans ,Infant ,Infant Health ,Male ,Maneb ,Maternal Exposure ,Maternal-Fetal Exchange ,Pesticides ,Pregnancy ,Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects ,Respiratory Sounds ,Respiratory Tract Infections ,Young Adult ,Zineb ,Mancozeb ,Respiratory outcomes ,Infants ,Costa Rica ,Public Health and Health Services ,Epidemiology ,Toxicology - Abstract
BackgroundGrowing evidence suggests that pesticide exposure may influence respiratory health, but data in young children are very limited. We examined the association of prenatal pesticide exposure with lower respiratory tract infections (LRTIs) and wheeze at one year of age in children from the Infants' Environmental Health (ISA) study in Costa Rica.MethodsWe measured seven pesticide metabolites, including ethylenethiourea (ETU, metabolite of mancozeb), in maternal urine samples collected repeatedly during pregnancy. For each woman, we averaged pesticide concentrations during each half of pregnancy (≤20 and >20 weeks of gestation) and across repeated samples collected over the course of pregnancy. We collected information about LRTIs (n = 355) and wheezing (n = 272) during the first year of life from mothers when their children were 11-19 months old. We fit multivariable logistic regression models using high (quartile 4) vs. low (quartiles 1-3) urinary pesticide concentrations as exposures and adjusted models for maternal age, education, parity, gestational age at birth, and child sex.ResultsTen percent of the children had at least one LRTI and 39% had at least one episode of wheezing during their first year of life. Median (25-75th percentile) specific gravity-corrected urinary ETU concentrations during the first half, second half, and over the course of pregnancy were 3.4 (2.1-5.0), 3.3 (2.2-4.7), and 3.4 (2.4-5.0) ng/mL, respectively. We observed that high urinary ETU concentrations during the first half of pregnancy were associated with increased odds of LRTI (OR = 2.45; 95% CI: 0.96, 6.26), whereas high urinary ETU concentrations during the second half of pregnancy were associated with decreased odds of wheezing (OR = 0.50; 95% CI: 0.26, 0.96). We found that the association between high urinary ETU concentrations during the first half of pregnancy and LRTIs persisted among mother-child pairs with either high or low ETU concentrations during the second half. In contrast, the association of high urinary ETU concentrations during the second half of pregnancy with wheezing was attenuated when we simultaneously adjusted for urinary ETU concentrations during the first half. We observed null associations between other pesticide metabolites measured during pregnancy and respiratory outcomes.ConclusionsOur data indicate that exposure to mancozeb/ETU during the first half of pregnancy may be associated with respiratory outcomes in the first year of life.
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- 2020
75. Prenatal dioxin exposure and thyroid hormone levels in the Seveso second generation study
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Warner, Marcella, Rauch, Stephen, Ames, Jennifer, Mocarelli, Paolo, Brambilla, Paolo, Signorini, Stefano, and Eskenazi, Brenda
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Biological Sciences ,Environmental Sciences ,Chemical Sciences ,Women's Health ,Perinatal Period - Conditions Originating in Perinatal Period ,Conditions Affecting the Embryonic and Fetal Periods ,Agent Orange & Dioxin ,Contraception/Reproduction ,Pediatric ,Endocrine Disruptors ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Reproductive health and childbirth ,Animals ,Antibodies ,Child ,Dioxins ,Female ,Humans ,Italy ,Male ,Polychlorinated Dibenzodioxins ,Pregnancy ,Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects ,Thyroid Gland ,Thyroid Hormones ,Prenatal exposure ,Seveso ,Thyroid hormones ,TCDD ,Toxicology ,Biological sciences ,Chemical sciences ,Environmental sciences - Abstract
BackgroundIn animal studies, perinatal exposure to 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD) alters thyroid homoeostasis and thyroid hormone concentrations; epidemiologic evidence is limited.ObjectivesWe aimed to determine the association of prenatal exposure to TCDD with thyroid hormone concentrations in the Seveso Second Generation Study, a unique cohort of children born to TCDD-exposed women resulting from a 1976 chemical factory explosion in Seveso, Italy.MethodsWe included 570 children (288 female, 282 male) with complete follow-up data, including a fasting blood draw. Serum levels of total and free thyroxine (T4), free triiodothyronine (T3), and thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) were measured using immunoassays. We defined prenatal TCDD exposure as: 1) maternal initial TCDD concentration measured in serum collected soon after the explosion and 2) maternal TCDD estimated at pregnancy.ResultsCompared to the lowest quartile (Q1), maternal initial serum TCDD was associated with lower free T3 (Q2: adj-β = -0.13, 95%CI -0.26, 0.00; Q3: adj-β = -0.22, 95%CI -0.35, -0.09; Q4: adj-β = -0.14, 95%CI -0.28, 0.00; p-trend = 0.02). In participants with high thyroid antibody status, inverse associations between maternal initial serum TCDD and free T3 were significantly stronger than in participants with normal antibody status (p-interaction = 0.02). We also observed a positive association between maternal initial serum TCDD and TSH concentrations in participants with high thyroid antibody status (Q2: adj-β = 11.4%, 95%CI -25.2, 66.1; Q3: adj-β = 49.0%, 95%CI 3.0, 115.5; Q4: adj-β = 105.5, 95%CI 36.6, 209.2; p-trend
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- 2020
76. Epigenome-wide meta-analysis of blood DNA methylation in newborns and children identifies numerous loci related to gestational age.
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Merid, Simon Kebede, Novoloaca, Alexei, Sharp, Gemma C, Küpers, Leanne K, Kho, Alvin T, Roy, Ritu, Gao, Lu, Annesi-Maesano, Isabella, Jain, Pooja, Plusquin, Michelle, Kogevinas, Manolis, Allard, Catherine, Vehmeijer, Florianne O, Kazmi, Nabila, Salas, Lucas A, Rezwan, Faisal I, Zhang, Hongmei, Sebert, Sylvain, Czamara, Darina, Rifas-Shiman, Sheryl L, Melton, Phillip E, Lawlor, Debbie A, Pershagen, Göran, Breton, Carrie V, Huen, Karen, Baiz, Nour, Gagliardi, Luigi, Nawrot, Tim S, Corpeleijn, Eva, Perron, Patrice, Duijts, Liesbeth, Nohr, Ellen Aagaard, Bustamante, Mariona, Ewart, Susan L, Karmaus, Wilfried, Zhao, Shanshan, Page, Christian M, Herceg, Zdenko, Jarvelin, Marjo-Riitta, Lahti, Jari, Baccarelli, Andrea A, Anderson, Denise, Kachroo, Priyadarshini, Relton, Caroline L, Bergström, Anna, Eskenazi, Brenda, Soomro, Munawar Hussain, Vineis, Paolo, Snieder, Harold, Bouchard, Luigi, Jaddoe, Vincent W, Sørensen, Thorkild IA, Vrijheid, Martine, Arshad, S Hasan, Holloway, John W, Håberg, Siri E, Magnus, Per, Dwyer, Terence, Binder, Elisabeth B, DeMeo, Dawn L, Vonk, Judith M, Newnham, John, Tantisira, Kelan G, Kull, Inger, Wiemels, Joseph L, Heude, Barbara, Sunyer, Jordi, Nystad, Wenche, Munthe-Kaas, Monica C, Räikkönen, Katri, Oken, Emily, Huang, Rae-Chi, Weiss, Scott T, Antó, Josep Maria, Bousquet, Jean, Kumar, Ashish, Söderhäll, Cilla, Almqvist, Catarina, Cardenas, Andres, Gruzieva, Olena, Xu, Cheng-Jian, Reese, Sarah E, Kere, Juha, Brodin, Petter, Solomon, Olivia, Wielscher, Matthias, Holland, Nina, Ghantous, Akram, Hivert, Marie-France, Felix, Janine F, Koppelman, Gerard H, London, Stephanie J, and Melén, Erik
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Humans ,Premature Birth ,DNA ,DNA Methylation ,Fetal Development ,Adolescent ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Infant ,Newborn ,Infant ,Premature ,Female ,Male ,Genetic Loci ,Epigenome ,Development ,Epigenetics ,Gestational age ,Preterm birth ,Transcriptomics ,Preschool ,Infant ,Newborn ,Premature ,Genetics ,Clinical Sciences - Abstract
BackgroundPreterm birth and shorter duration of pregnancy are associated with increased morbidity in neonatal and later life. As the epigenome is known to have an important role during fetal development, we investigated associations between gestational age and blood DNA methylation in children.MethodsWe performed meta-analysis of Illumina's HumanMethylation450-array associations between gestational age and cord blood DNA methylation in 3648 newborns from 17 cohorts without common pregnancy complications, induced delivery or caesarean section. We also explored associations of gestational age with DNA methylation measured at 4-18 years in additional pediatric cohorts. Follow-up analyses of DNA methylation and gene expression correlations were performed in cord blood. DNA methylation profiles were also explored in tissues relevant for gestational age health effects: fetal brain and lung.ResultsWe identified 8899 CpGs in cord blood that were associated with gestational age (range 27-42 weeks), at Bonferroni significance, P
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- 2020
77. Household air pollution profiles associated with persistent childhood cough in urban Uganda
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Coker, Eric, Katamba, Achilles, Kizito, Samuel, Eskenazi, Brenda, and Davis, J Lucian
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Clinical Research ,Tobacco ,Health Effects of Household Energy Combustion ,Prevention ,Health Effects of Indoor Air Pollution ,Lung ,Tobacco Smoke and Health ,Pediatric ,Respiratory ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Air Pollution ,Air Pollution ,Indoor ,Bayes Theorem ,Case-Control Studies ,Child ,Cooking ,Cough ,Environmental Exposure ,Humans ,Rural Population ,Uganda ,Household air pollution ,Clustering ,Africa ,Urban ,Environmental Sciences - Abstract
BackgroundMost household air pollution (HAP) interventions in developing countries of sub-Saharan Africa have focused on a single source, such as replacing polluting cooking sources with cleaner burning cooking stoves. Such interventions, however, have resulted in insufficient reductions in HAP levels and respiratory health risks in children. In this study we determined how multiple HAP combustion sources and exposure-mitigation factors in the home environment influence child respiratory health alone and in combination.MethodsWe carried out a case-control study to determine associations between multiple indicators of HAP and persistent cough among children (
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- 2020
78. The International Society for Children's Health and the Environment Commits to Reduce Its Carbon Footprint to Safeguard Children's Health.
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Eskenazi, Brenda, Etzel, Ruth A, Sripada, Kam, Cairns, Maryann R, Hertz-Picciotto, Irva, Kordas, Katarzyna, Machado Torres, João Paulo, Mielke, Howard W, Oulhote, Youssef, Quirós-Alcalá, Lesliam, Suárez-López, José R, and Zlatnik, Marya G
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Environmental Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Toxicology - Abstract
The Lancet Countdown and the 2018 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change declared that the worst impacts of climate change are and will continue to be felt disproportionately by children. Children are uniquely vulnerable to the consequences of climate change, including heat stress, food scarcity, increases in pollution and vector-borne diseases, lost family income, displacement, and the trauma of living through a climate-related disaster. These stressors can result in long-lasting physical and mental health sequelae. Based upon these concerns associated with climate change, the International Society for Children's Health and the Environment developed a statement about ways in which the Society could take action to reduce its contribution of greenhouse gas emissions. The objective of this article is to report our Society's plans in hopes that we may stimulate other scientific societies to take action. https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP6578.
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- 2020
79. Age at menarche in Seveso daughters exposed in utero to 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin
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Warner, Marcella, Rauch, Stephen, Ames, Jennifer, Mocarelli, Paolo, Brambilla, Paolo, and Eskenazi, Brenda
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Reproductive Medicine ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Agent Orange & Dioxin ,Contraception/Reproduction ,Pediatric ,Perinatal Period - Conditions Originating in Perinatal Period ,Conditions Affecting the Embryonic and Fetal Periods ,Reproductive health and childbirth ,Dioxin ,2 ,3 ,7 ,8-Tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin ,In utero exposure ,Menarche ,Seveso ,2 ,3 ,7 ,8-Tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin - Abstract
In utero exposure to 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD) is associated with delayed pubertal development in animal studies. No epidemiologic study has investigated this association. We examined the relationship of in utero exposure to TCDD with reported age at onset of menarche in female children born to a unique cohort of TCDD-exposed women resulting from an explosion in Seveso, Italy, on 10 July 1976.MethodsIn 2014, nearly 40 years after the explosion, we enrolled postexplosion offspring, 2 to 39 years of age, in the Seveso Second Generation Study. Age at onset of menarche (years) was collected for 316 daughters by maternal report or self-report at interview. In utero TCDD exposure was defined by maternal TCDD serum concentrations extrapolated to the pregnancy.ResultsAt interview, 287 daughters were postmenarche and reported age at menarche averaged 12.1 years (±1.3 years). Overall, we found no change in risk of menarche onset with a 10-fold increase in in utero TCDD exposure (hazard ratio [HR] = 0.86; 95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.71, 1.04). When we considered maternal menarche status in 1976 as a potentially sensitive developmental exposure window, in utero TCDD (log10) was associated with later age at menarche among daughters whose mothers were premenarche (HR = 0.71; 95% CI = 0.52, 0.97) but not postmenarche (HR = 0.89; 95% CI = 0.71, 1.12) at the time of the explosion (P int = 0.24).ConclusionsThese results suggest that in utero TCDD exposure may alter pubertal timing among daughters of women who were prepubescent at the time of the Seveso accident.
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- 2020
80. Prenatal dioxin exposure and glucose metabolism in the Seveso Second Generation study
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Warner, Marcella, Rauch, Stephen, Brambilla, Paolo, Signorini, Stefano, Mocarelli, Paolo, and Eskenazi, Brenda
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Reproductive Medicine ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Prevention ,Obesity ,Perinatal Period - Conditions Originating in Perinatal Period ,Endocrine Disruptors ,Agent Orange & Dioxin ,Diabetes ,Women's Health ,Conditions Affecting the Embryonic and Fetal Periods ,Pediatric ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Reproductive health and childbirth ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Child ,Dioxins ,Female ,Glucose ,Humans ,Italy ,Male ,Polychlorinated Dibenzodioxins ,Pregnancy ,Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects ,Young Adult ,Dioxin ,Glucose metabolism markers ,2 ,3 ,7 ,8-Tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin ,TCDD ,Seveso ,Insulin ,Environmental Sciences - Abstract
BackgroundExposure to endocrine disrupting compounds such as 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD) during susceptible developmental windows may alter risk of metabolic disease later in life. Animal studies of in utero and lactational TCDD exposure report associations with alterations in insulin sensitivity and energy homeostasis, but epidemiologic evidence is limited. We examined the relationship of prenatal TCDD exposure with markers of glucose homeostasis in the Seveso Second Generation study, a unique cohort of children born to TCDD-exposed women resulting from a 1976 explosion in Seveso, Italy.MethodsWe included 426 children who were 18 years or older with complete follow-up data including a fasting blood draw. Insulin and glucose were measured and the updated homoeostatic model assessment was used to estimate insulin resistance (HOMA2-IR) and beta-cell function (HOMA2-B). Prenatal TCDD exposure was defined in two ways, as initial maternal serum TCDD concentration and TCDD estimated at pregnancy.ResultsThe children (222 female, 204 male) averaged 28.6 (±6.0) years. We found a 10-fold increase in TCDD estimated at pregnancy was inversely associated with insulin (adj-β = -1.24 μIU/mL, 95% confidence interval (CI): -2.38, -0.09) and HOMA2-B (adj-β = -10.2% decrease, 95% CI: -17.8, -1.9) among daughters, but not sons (insulin: adj-β = 0.57 μIU/mL, 95% CI: -0.84, 1.98, P for interaction = 0.04; and HOMA2-B: adj-β = 0.8% increase, 95% CI -10.7, 13.9, P for interaction = 0.11). Similar effect modification was observed for TCDD estimated at pregnancy and HOMA2-IR (P for interaction = 0.13). The models for initial maternal serum TCDD showed similar effect modification by child sex. The observed associations in daughters showed evidence of mediation by body mass index, which we have previously found to be associated with prenatal TCDD exposure in female offspring.ConclusionThese results suggest prenatal exposure to TCDD is associated with lower insulin resistance and beta compensation in female offspring, and show evidence of mediation by body mass index.
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- 2020
81. Erratum: Maternal Peripartum Urinary Pyrethroid Metabolites are Associated with Thinner Children at 3.5 Years in the VHEMBE Birth Cohort (Limpopo, South Africa): Erratum.
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Huang, Jonathan, Eskenazi, Brenda, Bornman, Riana, Rauch, Stephen, and Chevrier, Jonathan
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Reproductive Medicine ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Good Health and Well Being - Abstract
[This corrects the article DOI: 10.1097/EE9.0000000000000026.].
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- 2020
82. Maternal vaccination against COVID-19 and neonatal outcomes during Omicron: INTERCOVID-2022 study
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Barros, Fernando C., Gunier, Robert B., Rego, Albertina, Sentilhes, Loïc, Rauch, Stephen, Gandino, Serena, Teji, Jagjit S., Thornton, Jim G., Kachikis, Alisa B., Nieto, Ricardo, Craik, Rachel, Cavoretto, Paolo I., Winsey, Adele, Roggero, Paola, Rodriguez, Gabriel B., Savasi, Valeria, Kalafat, Erkan, Giuliani, Francesca, Fabre, Marta, Benski, Anne Caroline, Coronado-Zarco, Irma Alejandra, Livio, Stefania, Ostrovska, Adela, Maiz, Nerea, Castedo Camacho, Fabiola R., Peterson, Ashley, Deruelle, Philippe, Giudice, Carolina, Casale, Roberto A., Salomon, Laurent J., Soto Conti, Constanza P., Prefumo, Federico, Mohamed Elbayoumy, Ehab Zakaria, Vale, Marynéa, Hernández, Valeria, Chandler, Katherine, Risso, Milagros, Marler, Emily, Cáceres, Daniela M., Crespo, Guadalupe Albornoz, Ernawati, Ernawati, Lipschuetz, Michal, Ariff, Shabina, Takahashi, Ken, Vecchiarelli, Carmen, Hubka, Teresa, Ikenoue, Satoru, Tavchioska, Gabriela, Bako, Babagana, Ayede, Adejumoke I., Eskenazi, Brenda, Bhutta, Zulfiqar A., Kennedy, Stephen H., Papageorghiou, Aris T., and Villar, Jose
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- 2024
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83. 5-Hydroxymethylcytosine in cord blood and associations of DNA methylation with sex in newborns
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Solomon, Olivia, Macisaac, Julia L, Tindula, Gwen, Kobor, Michael S, Eskenazi, Brenda, and Holland, Nina
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Genetics ,Pediatric ,Human Genome ,Generic health relevance ,5-Methylcytosine ,Biomarkers ,DNA Methylation ,Epigenesis ,Genetic ,Epigenomics ,Female ,Fetal Blood ,Humans ,Infant ,Newborn ,Male ,Sex Factors ,Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Toxicology - Abstract
DNA methylation has been widely studied for associations with exposures and health outcomes. Both 5-methylcytosine (5mC) and 5-hydroxymethylcytosine (5hmC) are epigenetic marks that may function differently to impact gene expression; however, the most commonly used technology to assess methylation for population studies in blood use are the Illumina 450K and EPIC BeadChips, for which the traditional bisulfite conversion does not differentiate 5mC and 5hmC marks. We used a modified protocol originally developed by Stewart et al. to analyse oxidative bisulfite-converted and conventional bisulfite-converted DNA for the same subject in parallel by the EPIC chip, allowing us to isolate the two measures. We measured 5mC and 5hmC in cord blood of 41 newborn participants of the Center for Health Assessment of Mothers and Children of Salinas (CHAMACOS) birth cohort and investigated differential methylation of 5mC + 5hmC, isolated 5mC and isolated 5hmC with sex at birth as an example of a biological variable previously associated with DNA methylation. Results showed low levels of 5hmC throughout the epigenome in the cord blood samples in comparison to 5mC. The concordance of autosomal hits between 5mC + 5hmC and exclusive 5mC analyses were low (25%); however, overlap was larger with increased effect size difference. There were 43 autosomal cytosine nucleotide followed by a guanine nucleotide (CpG) sites where 5hmC was associated with sex, 21 of which were unique to 5hmC after adjustment for cell composition. 5hmC only accounts for a small portion of overall methylation in cord blood; however, it has the potential to impact interpretation of combined 5hmC + 5mC studies in cord blood, especially given that effect sizes of differential methylation analyses are often small. Several significant CpG sites were unique to 5hmC, suggesting some functions distinct from 5mC. More studies of genome-wide 5hmC in children are warranted.
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- 2019
84. Deportation Worry, Cardiovascular Disease Risk Factor Trajectories, and Incident Hypertension: A Community‐Based Cohort Study
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Torres, Jacqueline M, Deardorff, Julianna, Holland, Nina, Harley, Kim G, Kogut, Katherine, Long, Kyna, and Eskenazi, Brenda
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular Medicine and Haematology ,Hypertension ,Cardiovascular ,Prevention ,Clinical Research ,Adult ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Cohort Studies ,Deportation ,Female ,Health Status Disparities ,Humans ,Mexico ,Risk Factors ,Severity of Illness Index ,Stress ,Psychological ,United States ,blood pressure ,health disparities ,hypertension ,longitudinal cohort study ,stress ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology - Abstract
Background Worry about deportation has been associated with cardiovascular disease risk factors in cross-sectional research. No research has evaluated this association longitudinally or examined the association between deportation worry and incident cardiovascular disease outcomes. Methods and Results We used data from an ongoing community-based cohort of 572 women primarily of Mexican origin. We estimated associations between self-reported deportation worry and: (1) trajectories of blood pressure, body mass index, and waist circumference with linear mixed models, and (2) incident hypertension with Cox proportional hazards models. Nearly half (48%) of women reported "a lot," 24% reported "moderate," and 28% reported "not too much" deportation worry. Higher worry at baseline was associated with nonlinear systolic blood pressure and mean arterial pressure trajectories. For example, compared with not too much worry, a lot of worry was associated with a faster initial increase (β, interaction with linear year term: 4.10; 95% CI, 1.17-7.03) followed by a faster decrease in systolic blood pressure (β, interaction with quadratic year term: -0.80; 95% CI, -1.55 to -0.06). There was weak evidence of an association between deportation worry and diastolic blood pressure and no association with body mass index, waist circumference, or pulse pressure trajectories. Among 408 women without baseline hypertension, reporting a lot (hazard ratio, 2.17; 95% CI, 1.15-4.10) and moderate deportation worry (hazard ratio, 2.48; 95% CI, 1.17-4.30) were each associated with greater risk of incident hypertension compared with reporting not too much worry. Conclusions Deportation worry may contribute to widening disparities in some cardiovascular disease risk factors and outcomes over time.
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- 2019
85. In utero dioxin exposure and cardiometabolic risk in the Seveso Second Generation Study
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Warner, Marcella, Rauch, Stephen, Ames, Jennifer, Mocarelli, Paolo, Brambilla, Paolo, Signorini, Stefano, and Eskenazi, Brenda
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Public Health ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Health Sciences ,Contraception/Reproduction ,Nutrition ,Agent Orange & Dioxin ,Obesity ,Conditions Affecting the Embryonic and Fetal Periods ,Prevention ,Perinatal Period - Conditions Originating in Perinatal Period ,Pediatric ,Clinical Research ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Reproductive health and childbirth ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Blood Pressure ,Body Size ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Cohort Studies ,Female ,Humans ,Italy ,Male ,Maternal Exposure ,Metabolic Syndrome ,Polychlorinated Dibenzodioxins ,Pregnancy ,Young Adult ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Education ,Endocrinology & Metabolism ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
Background/objectivesIn utero exposure to endocrine-disrupting compounds such as 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD) may alter risk of obesity and related metabolic disease later in life. We examined the relationship of prenatal exposure to TCDD with obesity and metabolic syndrome (MetS) in children born to a unique cohort of TCDD-exposed women resulting from a 1976 explosion in Seveso, Italy.Subjects/methodsIn 2014, nearly 40 years after the explosion, we enrolled 611 post-explosion offspring, 2 to 39 years of age, in the Seveso Second Generation Study. In utero TCDD exposure was defined primarily as TCDD concentration measured in maternal serum collected soon after the explosion and alternately as TCDD estimated at pregnancy. We measured height, weight, waist circumference, body fat, blood pressure, and fasting blood levels of lipids and glucose, which were combined to assess body mass index (BMI) and MetS.ResultsChildren (314 female, 297 male) averaged 23.6 (±6.0) years of age. Among the 431 children ≥18 years, a 10-fold increase in initial maternal TCDD concentration was inversely associated with BMI in daughters (adj-β = -0.99 kg/m2; 95% CI -1.86, -0.12), but not sons (adj-β = 0.41 kg/m2; 95% CI -0.35, 1.18) (p-int = 0.02). A similar relationship was found in the younger children (2-17 years); a 10-fold increase in initial maternal TCDD was inversely associated with BMI z-score (adj-β = -0.59 kg/m2; 95% CI -1.12, -0.06) among daughters, but not sons (adj-β = 0.04 kg/m2; 95% CI -0.34, 0.41) (p-int = 0.03). In contrast, in sons only, initial maternal TCDD was associated with increased risk for MetS (adj-RR = 2.09, 95% CI 1.09, 4.02). Results for TCDD estimated at pregnancy were comparable.ConclusionsThese results suggest prenatal TCDD exposure alters cardiometabolic endpoints in a sex-specific manner. In daughters, in utero TCDD is inversely associated with adiposity measures. In sons, in utero TCDD is associated with increased risk for MetS.
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- 2019
86. Prenatal Exposure to Phthalates and Neurodevelopment in the CHAMACOS Cohort.
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Hyland, Carly, Mora, Ana M, Kogut, Katherine, Calafat, Antonia M, Harley, Kim, Deardorff, Julianna, Holland, Nina, Eskenazi, Brenda, and Sagiv, Sharon K
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Humans ,Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects ,Phthalic Acids ,Environmental Pollutants ,Linear Models ,Cohort Studies ,Cognition ,Maternal Exposure ,Pregnancy ,Adolescent ,Child ,Female ,Male ,Toxicology ,Environmental Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences - Abstract
BACKGROUND:Previous studies suggest that prenatal exposure to phthalates, ubiquitous synthetic chemicals, may adversely affect neurodevelopment. However, data are limited on how phthalates affect cognition, executive function, and behavioral function into adolescence. OBJECTIVE:We aimed to investigate associations of prenatal phthalate exposure with neurodevelopment in childhood and adolescence in the Center for the Health Assessment of Mothers and Children of Salinas (CHAMACOS) study. METHODS:We examined associations between maternal urinary phthalate metabolite concentrations measured twice during pregnancy and a range of neurodevelopmental outcomes from ages 7 through 16 y in the CHAMACOS birth cohort (n=334). We used age-specific linear regression models and generalized estimating equation models to assess longitudinal effects and examined differences by sex. RESULTS:Phthalate metabolites were detected in 88%-100% of samples, depending on the metabolite. Associations of phthalates with neurodevelopmental outcomes were largely null with some noteworthy patterns. Higher prenatal concentrations of metabolites of low-molecular weight phthalates (ΣLMW) were associated with more self-reported hyperactivity [β=0.8, 95% confidence interval (CI): 0.1, 1.4 per 2-fold increase in ΣLMW phthalates], attention problems (β=1.5, 95% CI: 0.7, 2.2), and anxiety (β=0.9, 95% CI: 0.0, 1.8) at age 16. We observed sex-specific differences for the sums of high-molecular-weight and di(2-ethylhexyl) metabolites and cognitive outcomes (e.g., β for Full-Scale IQ for boys=-1.9, 95% CI: -4.1, 0.3 and -1.7, 95% CI: -3.8, 0.3, respectively; β for girls=1.8, 95% CI: 0.1, 3.4 and 1.6, 95% CI: 0.0, 3.2, respectively; p-int=0.01 for both). CONCLUSION:We found predominantly null associations of prenatal phthalates with neurodevelopment in CHAMACOS, and weak associations of ΣLMW phthalates with internalizing and externalizing behaviors in adolescence. No previous studies have examined associations of prenatal phthalate exposure with neurodevelopment into adolescence, an important time for manifestations of effects. https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP5165.
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- 2019
87. Sex and poverty modify associations between maternal peripartum concentrations of DDT/E and pyrethroid metabolites and thyroid hormone levels in neonates participating in the VHEMBE study, South Africa
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Chevrier, Jonathan, Rauch, Stephen, Obida, Muvhulawa, Crause, Madelein, Bornman, Riana, and Eskenazi, Brenda
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Malaria ,Pediatric ,Endocrine Disruptors ,Clinical Research ,Prevention ,Women's Health ,Infectious Diseases ,Rare Diseases ,Social Determinants of Health ,Perinatal Period - Conditions Originating in Perinatal Period ,Vector-Borne Diseases ,3.2 Interventions to alter physical and biological environmental risks ,4.1 Discovery and preclinical testing of markers and technologies ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Reproductive health and childbirth ,Good Health and Well Being ,No Poverty ,Adult ,Black People ,Child ,Cohort Studies ,DDT ,Dichlorodiphenyl Dichloroethylene ,Environmental Exposure ,Female ,Humans ,Infant ,Newborn ,Insecticides ,Male ,Maternal Exposure ,Peripartum Period ,Poverty ,Pregnancy ,Pyrethrins ,Sex Factors ,South Africa ,Thyroid Hormones ,Thyrotropin ,Indoor residual spraying ,Pyrethroid insecticides ,Thyroid hormones ,Thyroid-stimulating hormone ,Thyroxine ,Environmental Sciences - Abstract
Indoor Residual Spraying (IRS), the application of insecticides on the inside walls of dwellings, is used by 84 countries for malaria control. Although effective in preventing malaria, this practice results in elevated insecticide exposure to >100 million people, most of whom are Africans. Pyrethroid insecticides and dichlorodiphenyl trichloroethane (DDT) are currently used for IRS. Animal and in vitro studies suggest that pyrethroids and DDT interfere with thyroid hormone homeostasis but human studies are inconsistent and no prior study has investigated this question in a population residing in an area where IRS is conducted. Our objective was thus to evaluate whether prenatal exposure to pyrethroids, DDT or DDT's breakdown product dichlorodiphenyl dichloroethylene (DDE) is associated with altered thyroid hormone levels among neonates from Limpopo, South Africa, where pyrethroids and DDT are used annually to control malaria. We measured serum DDT/E and urinary pyrethroid metabolite concentrations in maternal peripartum samples from 717 women participating in the Venda Health Examination of Mothers, Babies and their Environment (VHEMBE), a birth cohort study conducted in Limpopo's Vhembe district. We measured total thyroxine (T4) and thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) in dried blood spots collected via heel stick. We found that all pyrethroid metabolites were positively associated with TSH; trans-DCCA and 3-PBA showed the strongest associations with a 12.3% (95%CI = 3.0, 22.3) and 14.0% (95%CI = 0.5, 30.2) change for each 10-fold increase in biomarker concentration, respectively. These associations were substantially stronger among children from households below the South African food poverty line. DDT and DDE were associated with lower total T4 among boys only (β = -0.27 μg/dL per 10-fold increase; 95%CI = -0.47, -0.04). Results suggest that prenatal exposure to DDT, DDE and pyrethroid insecticides is associated with changes in neonatal thyroid hormones consistent with hypothyroidism/hypothyroxinemia and that sex and poverty modify associations. Further research is needed to confirm these findings and examine whether they have implications for child development.
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- 2019
88. Seasonality of antenatal care attendance, maternal dietary intake, and fetal growth in the VHEMBE birth cohort, South Africa
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Fahey, Carolyn A, Chevrier, Jonathan, Crause, Madelein, Obida, Muvhulawa, Bornman, Riana, and Eskenazi, Brenda
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BRII recipient: Fahey - Abstract
Background Seasonality of food availability, physical activity, and infections commonly occurs within rural communities in low and middle-income countries with distinct rainy seasons. To better understand the implications of these regularly occurring environmental stressors for maternal and child health, this study examined seasonal variation in nutrition and health care access of pregnant women and infants in rural South Africa. Methods We analyzed data from the Venda Health Examination of Mothers, Babies and their Environment (VHEMBE) birth cohort study of 752 mother-infant pairs recruited at delivery from August 2012 to December 2013 in the Vhembe District of Limpopo Province, the northernmost region of South Africa. We used truncated Fourier series regression to assess seasonality of antenatal care (ANC) attendance, dietary intake, and birth size. We additionally regressed ANC attendance on daily rainfall values. Models included adjustment for sociodemographic characteristics. Results Maternal ANC attendance, dietary composition, and infant birth size exhibited significant seasonal variation in both unadjusted and adjusted analyses. Adequate frequency of ANC attendance during pregnancy (≥ 4 visits) was highest among women delivering during the gardening season and lowest during the lean (rainy) season. High rainfall during the third trimester was also negatively associated with adequate ANC attendance (adjusted OR = 0.59, 95% CI: 0.40, 0.86). Carbohydrate intake declined during the harvest season and increased during the vegetable gardening and lean seasons, while fat intake followed the opposite trend. Infant birth weight, length, and head circumference z-scores peaked following the gardening season and were lowest after the harvest season. Maternal protein intake and ANC ≤ 12 weeks did not significantly vary by season or rainfall. Conclusions Seasonal patterns were apparent in ANC utilization, dietary intake, and fetal growth in rural South Africa. Interventions to promote maternal and child health in similar settings should consider seasonal factors.
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- 2019
89. Prenatal exposure to organophosphate pesticides and functional neuroimaging in adolescents living in proximity to pesticide application
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Sagiv, Sharon K, Bruno, Jennifer L, Baker, Joseph M, Palzes, Vanessa, Kogut, Katherine, Rauch, Stephen, Gunier, Robert, Mora, Ana M, Reiss, Allan L, and Eskenazi, Brenda
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Biological Psychology ,Cognitive and Computational Psychology ,Psychology ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Climate-Related Exposures and Conditions ,Rural Health ,Pediatric ,Pediatric Research Initiative ,Clinical Research ,Mind and Body ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Neurosciences ,Mental Health ,Brain Disorders ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,Aetiology ,2.2 Factors relating to the physical environment ,Neurological ,Mental health ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Brain ,California ,Environmental Exposure ,Female ,Functional Neuroimaging ,Humans ,Insecticides ,Language Tests ,Male ,Maternal Exposure ,Mexican Americans ,Middle Aged ,Neurodevelopmental Disorders ,Organophosphorus Compounds ,Pesticides ,Pregnancy ,Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects ,Regression Analysis ,Sex Characteristics ,Young Adult ,organophosphates ,prenatal exposure ,neurodevelopment ,functional neuroimaging ,fNIRS - Abstract
We have reported consistent associations of prenatal organophosphate pesticide (OP) exposure with poorer cognitive function and behavior problems in our Center for the Health Assessment of Mothers and Children of Salinas (CHAMACOS), a birth cohort of Mexican American youth in California's agricultural Salinas Valley. However, there is little evidence on how OPs affect neural dynamics underlying associations. We used functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) to measure cortical activation during tasks of executive function, attention, social cognition, and language comprehension in 95 adolescent CHAMACOS participants. We estimated associations of residential proximity to OP use during pregnancy with cortical activation in frontal, temporal, and parietal regions using multiple regression models, adjusting for sociodemographic characteristics. OP exposure was associated with altered brain activation during tasks of executive function. For example, with a 10-fold increase in total OP pesticide use within 1 km of maternal residence during pregnancy, there was a bilateral decrease in brain activation in the prefrontal cortex during a cognitive flexibility task (β = -4.74; 95% CI: -8.18, -1.31 and β = -4.40; 95% CI: -7.96, -0.84 for the left and right hemispheres, respectively). We also found that prenatal OP exposure was associated with sex differences in brain activation during a language comprehension task. This first functional neuroimaging study of prenatal OP exposure suggests that pesticides may impact cortical brain activation, which could underlie previously reported OP-related associations with cognitive and behavioral function. Use of fNIRS in environmental epidemiology offers a practical alternative to neuroimaging technologies and enhances our efforts to assess the impact of chemical exposures on neurodevelopment.
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- 2019
90. Heterogeneity in childhood body mass trajectories in relation to prenatal phthalate exposure
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Heggeseth, Brianna C, Holland, Nina, Eskenazi, Brenda, Kogut, Katherine, and Harley, Kim G
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Biological Sciences ,Environmental Sciences ,Chemical Sciences ,Pediatric ,Obesity ,Endocrine Disruptors ,Nutrition ,Clinical Research ,Childhood Obesity ,Women's Health ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Cancer ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Adolescent ,Body Mass Index ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Cohort Studies ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Environmental Exposure ,Environmental Pollutants ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Phthalic Acids ,Pregnancy ,Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects ,Sexual Maturation ,Prenatal ,Phthalate ,Trajectory ,Body mass index ,Development ,Toxicology ,Biological sciences ,Chemical sciences ,Environmental sciences - Abstract
Phthalates, compounds commonly used in plastics and personal care products, have been associated with childhood obesity in cross-sectional and some longitudinal studies. Using advanced statistical methods, we characterized the heterogeneity in body mass development patterns over childhood (ages 2-14 years) and explored associations with maternal prenatal urinary concentrations of phthalates among 335 children in the Center for the Health Assessment of Mothers and Children of Salinas (CHAMACOS) cohort study. Height and weight were measured every one to two years in this cohort, which had a high prevalence of obesity and overweight. Building upon a previous analysis that showed a positive association between prenatal phthalate exposure and body mass index (BMI) in CHAMACOS children, we used three advanced statistical methods: generalized additive models, growth mixture models, and functional principal component analysis with tree-based methods to identify patterns of childhood BMI development and allow for non-linear relationships with the environmental exposures. Our results highlight the heterogeneity in childhood BMI development patterns and suggest a sex-specific non-linear association between prenatal monoethyl phthalate urinary concentrations and BMI level in children, confirmed across a variety of statistical methods. There is also evidence to suggest positive associations between DEHP metabolites and BMI stabilization during puberty for girls.
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- 2019
91. Proposed Key Characteristics of Female Reproductive Toxicants as an Approach for Organizing and Evaluating Mechanistic Data in Hazard Assessment.
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Luderer, Ulrike, Eskenazi, Brenda, Hauser, Russ, Korach, Kenneth S, McHale, Cliona M, Moran, Francisco, Rieswijk, Linda, Solomon, Gina, Udagawa, Osamu, Zhang, Luoping, Zlatnik, Marya, Zeise, Lauren, and Smith, Martyn T
- Subjects
Animals ,Humans ,Mice ,Rats ,Hazardous Substances ,Risk Assessment ,Reproduction ,Female ,Climate-Related Exposures and Conditions ,Contraception/Reproduction ,Reproductive Health and Childbirth ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Environmental Sciences ,Toxicology - Abstract
BackgroundIdentification of female reproductive toxicants is currently based largely on integrated epidemiological and in vivo toxicology data and, to a lesser degree, on mechanistic data. A uniform approach to systematically search, organize, integrate, and evaluate mechanistic evidence of female reproductive toxicity from various data types is lacking.ObjectiveWe sought to apply a key characteristics approach similar to that pioneered for carcinogen hazard identification to female reproductive toxicant hazard identification.MethodsA working group of international experts was convened to discuss mechanisms associated with chemical-induced female reproductive toxicity and identified 10 key characteristics of chemicals that cause female reproductive toxicity: 1) alters hormone receptor signaling; alters reproductive hormone production, secretion, or metabolism; 2) chemical or metabolite is genotoxic; 3) induces epigenetic alterations; 4) causes mitochondrial dysfunction; 5) induces oxidative stress; 6) alters immune function; 7) alters cell signal transduction; 8) alters direct cell–cell interactions; 9) alters survival, proliferation, cell death, or metabolic pathways; and 10) alters microtubules and associated structures. As proof of principle, cyclophosphamide and diethylstilbestrol (DES), for which both human and animal studies have demonstrated female reproductive toxicity, display at least 5 and 3 key characteristics, respectively. 2,3,7,8-Tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD), for which the epidemiological evidence is mixed, exhibits 5 key characteristics.DiscussionFuture efforts should focus on evaluating the proposed key characteristics against additional known and suspected female reproductive toxicants. Chemicals that exhibit one or more of the key characteristics could be prioritized for additional evaluation and testing. A key characteristics approach has the potential to integrate with pathway-based toxicity testing to improve prediction of female reproductive toxicity in chemicals and potentially prevent some toxicants from entering common use. https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP4971.
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- 2019
92. A community-based education programme to reduce insecticide exposure from indoor residual spraying in Limpopo, South Africa
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Eskenazi, Brenda, Levine, David I, Rauch, Stephen, Obida, Muvhulawa, Crause, Madelein, Bornman, Riana, and Chevrier, Jonathan
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BRII recipient: Eskenazi - Abstract
BackgroundIndoor residual spraying (IRS), the coating of interior walls of houses with insecticides, is common in malaria-endemic areas. While important in malaria control, IRS potentially exposes residents to harmful insecticides. The World Health Organization recommends steps to minimize exposure; however, no programme has focused on educating populations.MethodsA dramatic presentation and song were developed by study personnel and performed by lay performers in order to spread awareness of the importance of IRS and to minimize insecticide exposure. Performances were staged at 16 sprayed villages in the Vhembe District of Limpopo, South Africa, at which 592 attendees completed short questionnaires before and after the performance about behaviors that might limit insecticide exposure. Overall indices of the attendees’ change in knowledge of precautions to take prior to and after spraying to prevent insecticide exposure were analyzed using hierarchical mixed models to assess the effect of the performance on change in participants’ knowledge.ResultsApproximately half of attendees lived in homes that had been sprayed for malaria and 62% were female. Over 90% thought it better to allow IRS prior to the presentation, but knowledge of proper precautions to prevent exposure was low. The proportion answering correctly about proper distance from home during spraying increased from 49.4% pre-performance to 62.0% post-performance (RR = 1.26, 95% CI = 1.13, 1.41), and the proportion reporting correctly about home re-entry interval after spraying increased from 58.5 to 91.1% (RR = 1.54, 95% CI 1.35, 1.77). Attendees improved in their knowledge about precautions to take prior to and after spraying from mean of 57.9% correct to a mean of 69.7% (β = 12.1%, 95% CI 10.9, 13.4). Specifically, increased knowledge in closing cupboards, removing food and bedding from the home, covering immoveable items with plastic, and leading animals away from the home prior to spraying were observed, as was increased knowledge in sweeping the floors, proper disposal of dead insects, and discarding dirty washrags after spraying.ConclusionsA dramatic presentation and song were able to increase the attendees’ knowledge of precautions to take prior to and after spraying in order to limit their insecticide exposure resulting from IRS. This approach to community education is promising and deserves additional study.
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- 2019
93. Manganese exposure and working memory-related brain activity in smallholder farmworkers in Costa Rica: Results from a pilot study
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Palzes, Vanessa A, Sagiv, Sharon K, Baker, Joseph M, Rojas-Valverde, Daniel, Gutiérrez-Vargas, Randall, Winkler, Mirko S, Fuhrimann, Samuel, Staudacher, Philipp, Menezes-Filho, José A, Reiss, Allan L, Eskenazi, Brenda, and Mora, Ana M
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Biological Sciences ,Environmental Sciences ,Chemical Sciences ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Neurosciences ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Neurological ,Mental health ,Brain ,Costa Rica ,Farmers ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Manganese ,Memory ,Short-Term ,Occupational Exposure ,Pilot Projects ,Mancozeb ,Pesticides ,Farmworkers ,Neuroimaging ,Functional near-infrared spectroscopy ,Working memory ,Toxicology ,Biological sciences ,Chemical sciences ,Environmental sciences - Abstract
Main sources of manganese (Mn) in the general population are diet and drinking water. Mn is also found in ethylene bisdithiocarbamate (EBDC) fungicides used in agriculture or emitted into the air by ferromanganese plants and welding fumes, which can be additional environmental and occupational sources of exposure. High occupational Mn exposure has been linked with motor, behavioral, and cognitive impairment, but its effects on neural function remain poorly understood. We conducted a functional neuroimaging study in a sample of 48 farmworkers in Zarcero County, Costa Rica, an agricultural region where EBDC fungicides are sprayed. We measured Mn concentrations in farmworkers' toenails (n = 40 farmworkers) and hair (n = 33 farmworkers), and recorded brain activity in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex during a letter-retrieval working memory task using functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS). We estimated exposure-outcome associations using multivariable linear regression models adjusted for age and education level. Geometric mean (geometric standard deviation) toenail and hair Mn concentrations were 0.40 μg/g (3.52) and 0.24 μg/g (3.54), respectively. We did not find strong evidence that Mn concentrations were associated with working memory-related brain activity in this sample of farmworkers; we also found null associations between working memory task accuracy and brain activity. However, our small sample size may have limited our ability to detect small effect sizes with statistical precision. Our study demonstrates that fNIRS can be a useful and feasible tool in environmental epidemiology for examining the effects of toxicants, like Mn, on neural function. This may prove to be important for elucidating neuropathological pathways that underlie previously reported associations of elevated Mn exposure with neurotoxic effects.
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- 2019
94. Improving autism perinatal risk factors: A systematic review
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Cheng, Jenna, Eskenazi, Brenda, Widjaja, Felicia, Cordero, José F, and Hendren, Robert L
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Pediatric ,Brain Disorders ,Mental Health ,Prevention ,Autism ,Perinatal Period - Conditions Originating in Perinatal Period ,Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities (IDD) ,Nutrition ,Reproductive health and childbirth ,Good Health and Well Being ,Autistic Disorder ,Birth Intervals ,Breast Feeding ,Environmental Exposure ,Fatty Acids ,Omega-3 ,Female ,Folic Acid ,Humans ,Immune System ,Male ,Maternal Exposure ,Parents ,Postpartum Period ,Pregnancy ,Pregnancy Complications ,Risk Factors ,Risk ,Medicine ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery - Abstract
BackgroundCurrent understanding of the etiology of autism is based on the interaction of multiple genes with each other and with environmental factors, leading to a neurodevelopmental process that results in the expression of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) in the child. This suggests that it might be possible to strengthen resilience to environmental stressors during the perinatal period to improve outcomes and possibly prevent the development of ASD.MethodsWe searched the MEDLINE database for multiple perinatal factors associated with the development of ASD published between January 1, 2005 and July 1, 2018. The search terms used were "autism" crossed with either "perinatal," "prenatal," "gestational," or "pregnancy," and crossed again with each perinatal risk factor highlighted in this review including topics on parental health, infections, medications, and environmental stressors. We then searched interventions that may improve neurodevelopmental outcome before and during pregnancy, including supplements, breastfeeding, and postpartum stress reduction. We identified recent or unique metanalyses and systematic reviews of the identified focus and on randomized controlled trials and summarized these using the most recent and comprehensive reviews.ResultsFolate, omega-3, vitamin D3, environmental toxin avoidance, correcting deficiencies, immune boosting, and prolonged breast feeding are all reported to be linked to the possible reduction of adverse pregnancy outcomes including ASD.ConclusionsStudies of individual components for improving pregnancy outcomes and several uncontrolled preconception to infancy medical practices suggest that multiple interventions might improve the outcomes of pregnancies where there is risk for developing ASD.
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- 2019
95. Meta-analysis of epigenome-wide association studies in neonates reveals widespread differential DNA methylation associated with birthweight.
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Küpers, Leanne K, Monnereau, Claire, Sharp, Gemma C, Yousefi, Paul, Salas, Lucas A, Ghantous, Akram, Page, Christian M, Reese, Sarah E, Wilcox, Allen J, Czamara, Darina, Starling, Anne P, Novoloaca, Alexei, Lent, Samantha, Roy, Ritu, Hoyo, Cathrine, Breton, Carrie V, Allard, Catherine, Just, Allan C, Bakulski, Kelly M, Holloway, John W, Everson, Todd M, Xu, Cheng-Jian, Huang, Rae-Chi, van der Plaat, Diana A, Wielscher, Matthias, Merid, Simon Kebede, Ullemar, Vilhelmina, Rezwan, Faisal I, Lahti, Jari, van Dongen, Jenny, Langie, Sabine AS, Richardson, Tom G, Magnus, Maria C, Nohr, Ellen A, Xu, Zongli, Duijts, Liesbeth, Zhao, Shanshan, Zhang, Weiming, Plusquin, Michelle, DeMeo, Dawn L, Solomon, Olivia, Heimovaara, Joosje H, Jima, Dereje D, Gao, Lu, Bustamante, Mariona, Perron, Patrice, Wright, Robert O, Hertz-Picciotto, Irva, Zhang, Hongmei, Karagas, Margaret R, Gehring, Ulrike, Marsit, Carmen J, Beilin, Lawrence J, Vonk, Judith M, Jarvelin, Marjo-Riitta, Bergström, Anna, Örtqvist, Anne K, Ewart, Susan, Villa, Pia M, Moore, Sophie E, Willemsen, Gonneke, Standaert, Arnout RL, Håberg, Siri E, Sørensen, Thorkild IA, Taylor, Jack A, Räikkönen, Katri, Yang, Ivana V, Kechris, Katerina, Nawrot, Tim S, Silver, Matt J, Gong, Yun Yun, Richiardi, Lorenzo, Kogevinas, Manolis, Litonjua, Augusto A, Eskenazi, Brenda, Huen, Karen, Mbarek, Hamdi, Maguire, Rachel L, Dwyer, Terence, Vrijheid, Martine, Bouchard, Luigi, Baccarelli, Andrea A, Croen, Lisa A, Karmaus, Wilfried, Anderson, Denise, de Vries, Maaike, Sebert, Sylvain, Kere, Juha, Karlsson, Robert, Arshad, Syed Hasan, Hämäläinen, Esa, Routledge, Michael N, Boomsma, Dorret I, Feinberg, Andrew P, Newschaffer, Craig J, Govarts, Eva, Moisse, Matthieu, Fallin, M Daniele, Melén, Erik, and Prentice, Andrew M
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Fetus ,Humans ,Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects ,Birth Weight ,Folic Acid ,DNA ,Body Mass Index ,Smoking ,DNA Methylation ,Epigenesis ,Genetic ,CpG Islands ,Fetal Development ,Pregnancy ,Genome ,Human ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Child ,Infant ,Newborn ,Female ,Male ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,Epigenesis ,Genetic ,Genome ,Human ,Infant ,Newborn - Abstract
Birthweight is associated with health outcomes across the life course, DNA methylation may be an underlying mechanism. In this meta-analysis of epigenome-wide association studies of 8,825 neonates from 24 birth cohorts in the Pregnancy And Childhood Epigenetics Consortium, we find that DNA methylation in neonatal blood is associated with birthweight at 914 sites, with a difference in birthweight ranging from -183 to 178 grams per 10% increase in methylation (PBonferroni
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- 2019
96. The 2nd to 4th digit length ratio (2D:4D) among children of Seveso women exposed to 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin
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Slama, Natalie, Warner, Marcella, Mocarelli, Paolo, Brambilla, Paolo, and Eskenazi, Brenda
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Biological Psychology ,Social and Personality Psychology ,Psychology ,Reproductive Medicine ,Perinatal Period - Conditions Originating in Perinatal Period ,Clinical Research ,Pediatric ,Estrogen ,Agent Orange & Dioxin ,Conditions Affecting the Embryonic and Fetal Periods ,Reproductive health and childbirth ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Endocrine Disruptors ,Environmental Exposure ,Female ,Fingers ,Humans ,Italy ,Male ,Maternal Exposure ,Polychlorinated Dibenzodioxins ,Pregnancy ,Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects ,Digit ratio ,Dioxin ,TCDD ,In utero exposure ,Endocrine disruptors ,Clinical Sciences ,Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine ,Cognitive Sciences ,Pediatrics ,Paediatrics ,Reproductive medicine ,Applied and developmental psychology - Abstract
BackgroundExposure to endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs) during sensitive developmental windows, such as in utero, may influence disease later in life but direct measurement of fetal hormones is not feasible. The ratio of the length of the second finger digit to the fourth digit (2D:4D), a sexually dimorphic trait, is a biomarker of androgen levels and the androgen/estrogen balance in utero. However, it is unclear whether in utero EDC exposure might alter 2D:4D ratio.AimsWe examined 2D:4D ratio in Seveso children in relation to in utero exposure to a potent EDC, 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD) using linear regression.Study designThe Seveso Women's Health Study (SWHS) is a historical cohort study, following the health of women exposed to TCDD during a 1976 explosion in Seveso, Italy. Individual-level TCDD was measured for SWHS in serum collected soon after the accident. In 2014, the SWHS children born after the explosion were enrolled in the Seveso Second Generation Study.Subjects594 SWHS children born post-explosion to 397 mothers.Outcome measuresRight hand 2D:4D ratio.ResultsOn average, 2D:4D ratio for males was significantly lower than for females (p
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- 2019
97. Prenatal dioxin exposure and neuropsychological functioning in the Seveso Second Generation Health Study
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Ames, Jennifer, Warner, Marcella, Siracusa, Claudia, Signorini, Stefano, Brambilla, Paolo, Mocarelli, Paolo, and Eskenazi, Brenda
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Behavioral and Social Science ,Pediatric ,Conditions Affecting the Embryonic and Fetal Periods ,Clinical Research ,Mental Health ,Agent Orange & Dioxin ,Neurosciences ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,Aetiology ,Mental health ,Reproductive health and childbirth ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Breast Feeding ,Child ,Environmental Pollutants ,Female ,Humans ,Italy ,Male ,Maternal Exposure ,Maternal-Fetal Exchange ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Polychlorinated Dibenzodioxins ,Pregnancy ,Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects ,Seveso Accidental Release ,Sex Characteristics ,Dioxins ,Prenatal exposure ,Seveso ,Neurobehavioral effects ,Children's environmental health ,TCDD ,Public Health and Health Services ,Epidemiology ,Toxicology - Abstract
BackgroundPrenatal 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD) exposure has been shown to alter sexual differentiation of the brain in animal models, impacting pubertal development, behavior, cortical dominance, and cognition. The effects of early life exposure to dioxin-like compounds on human neurodevelopment, however, are less clear and warrant further investigation.MethodsThe Seveso Women's Health Study (SWHS), initiated in 1996, is a well-characterized cohort of 981 Italian women who lived in proximity to an industrial accident in July 1976 that resulted in one of the highest residential TCDD exposures on record. In 2014-2016, we enrolled offspring born after the accident into the Seveso Second Generation Health Study. Children aged 7-17 years old (n = 161) completed a neuropsychological assessment spanning executive function and reverse learning (Wisconsin Card Sort), non-verbal intelligence (Raven's Progressive Matrices), attention and hyperactivity (Connor's Continuous Performance (CPT), and memory (Rey's Auditory Verbal Learning). We used multivariate regression with robust standard error estimates accounting for clustering of siblings to model the associations between these outcomes and prenatal exposure defined as TCDD measured in maternal serum collected soon after the explosion and estimated to pregnancy.ResultsThe children (82 male, 79 female) averaged 13.1 (±2.9) years of age. Adjusting for covariates, a 10-fold increase in maternal serum TCDD was not adversely associated with reverse learning/set-shifting, memory, attention/impulsivity, or non-verbal intelligence. In sex-stratified models, prenatal TCDD was associated with more non-perseverative errors in boys but not in girls (pint = 0.04). TCDD was also associated with attention deficits on the CPT but only among children with the shortest breastfeeding histories.ConclusionsWhile overall, there were no significant associations, the observed differential neurotoxic sensitivities to TCDD by sex and lactation history may warrant confirmation in future studies.
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- 2019
98. Age-Related Differences in miRNA Expression in Mexican-American Newborns and Children.
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Huen, Karen, Lizarraga, Daneida, Kogut, Katherine, Eskenazi, Brenda, and Holland, Nina
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Humans ,MicroRNAs ,Gene Expression Profiling ,Age Factors ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Developmental ,Child ,Infant ,Newborn ,Mexican Americans ,age ,blood ,miRNA ,Pediatric Research Initiative ,Pediatric ,Genetics ,Biotechnology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Generic health relevance ,Toxicology - Abstract
Epigenetic mechanisms have emerged as an important pathway through which environmental exposures can affect health through the regulation of gene expression without changes in DNA sequence: microRNAs (miRNAs) are short non-coding RNAs that target protein-coding mRNAs, leading to post-transcriptional repression. They are involved in important physiologic processes, but little is known about how miRNA expression may change with age in children. We used an nCounter miRNA assay to assess the expression of 43 miRNAs in buffy coat samples collected from newborns (n = 121) and 7-year-old (n = 142) children. We identified 36 miRNAs that were differentially expressed between newborns and 7-year-olds after controlling for blood cell composition. Using pathway analysis, we found that differentially expressed miRNAs targeted genes enriched for processes related to post-translational modifications, metabolism, and immune response. Our study found that unlike adults, where miRNA expression levels in peripheral blood may decrease with age, expression levels of most miRNAs increased from birth to mid-childhood. This may be reflective of the role miRNAs may play in the highly coordinated mechanisms regulating genes involved in children's development. Furthermore, it will be important to adjust for both age and blood cell composition in future pediatric studies of miRNA expression in blood.
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- 2019
99. Early-Life Home Environment and Obesity in a Mexican American Birth Cohort
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Tindula, Gwen, Gunier, Robert B, Deardorff, Julianna, Nabaglo, Kelly, Hubbard, Alan, Huen, Karen, Eskenazi, Brenda, and Holland, Nina
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Pediatric ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Depression ,Nutrition ,Prevention ,Obesity ,Mental Health ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Research ,Aetiology ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,Mental health ,Adiponectin ,Adolescent ,Child ,Child of Impaired Parents ,Child ,Preschool ,Family ,Female ,Humans ,Infant ,Infant ,Newborn ,Leptin ,Longitudinal Studies ,Male ,Mexican Americans ,Pediatric Obesity ,Social Environment ,Social Support ,adiponectin ,children ,home environment ,leptin ,Mexican American ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Psychiatry ,Clinical sciences ,Biological psychology - Abstract
ObjectiveLittle is known about the impact of the home environment on biomarkers of obesity, such as adipokines, in children. In this study, we examined the relationship of maternal depressive symptoms and potentially protective social factors, including maternal support and the home learning environment, with body mass index and adipokines.MethodsData were obtained from 326 Mexican American participants from the Center for the Health Assessment of Mothers and Children of Salinas cohort. Plasma adipokine levels were assessed in 326 children by enzyme-linked immunoassay at birth or ages 5, 9, or 14 years. Maternal depressive symptoms were evaluated using the Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale when children were 1, 3.5, 7, and 9 years old; social support was assessed by the Duke-University of North Carolina Questionnaire at ages 1 and 5 years; and home learning environment by the Home Observation for the Measurement of the Environment (HOME) at ages of 6 months and 1, 2, 3.5, 7, 9, and 10.5 years.ResultsAge was significantly associated with adiponectin (B = -5.0, SE = 0.2) and leptin (B = 0.01, SE = 0.003) levels. Individual time point analyses identified significant positive associations of HOME scores in childhood with adiponectin at ages 9 years (HOME score; age 3.5 years: B = 0.9, p = .04) and 14 years (HOME score; age 7 years: B = 0.6, p = .02, age 9 years: B = 0.6, p = .05, age 10.5 years: B = 0.5, p = .04). We observed significant relationships of maternal depressive symptoms at age 9 years with adiponectin and body mass index z-score at age 14 years (B = -0.2, p = .003 and B = 0.02, p = .002, resp.), which were confirmed in longitudinal models.ConclusionsThis study adds new evidence that adverse and protective aspects of the home environment could lead to altered obesity status in children.
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- 2019
100. Prenatal high molecular weight phthalates and bisphenol A, and childhood respiratory and allergic outcomes
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Berger, Kimberly, Eskenazi, Brenda, Balmes, John, Kogut, Katie, Holland, Nina, Calafat, Antonia M, and Harley, Kim G
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Paediatrics ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Immunology ,Pediatric ,Clinical Research ,Asthma ,Lung ,2.2 Factors relating to the physical environment ,Aetiology ,Respiratory ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Bayes Theorem ,Benzhydryl Compounds ,Biomarkers ,California ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Eczema ,Environmental Exposure ,Environmental Pollutants ,Female ,Humans ,Phenols ,Phthalic Acids ,Pregnancy ,Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects ,Prevalence ,Spirometry ,T-Lymphocytes ,Helper-Inducer ,Young Adult ,bisphenol A ,diethylhexyl phthalate ,endocrine disruptor ,environmental exposure ,hypersensitivity ,Th1-Th2 balance ,Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine ,Public Health and Health Services ,Allergy - Abstract
BackgroundThe prevalence of asthma and allergy is increasing in US children. In utero exposure to chemicals used in personal care products and plastics may contribute to increase in these diseases.MethodsWe quantified urinary concentrations of eight phthalate metabolites and bisphenol A in mothers twice during pregnancy in 1999-2000 in Salinas, California. We assessed probable asthma, aeroallergies, eczema, and spirometry in their children at age 7, and measured T helper 1 and T helper 2 cells in blood at ages 2, 5, and 7 (N = 392). We employed Bayesian model averaging to select confounders from additional biomarkers measured in this population and controlled for them in logistic and linear regressions.ResultsMonocarboxyisooctyl phthalate was associated with increased odds for probable asthma (odds ratio: 1.54, 95% CI: 1.12, 2.12), and with lower forced expiratory volume in one second (β: -0.09 L, 95% CI: -0.15, -0.03) and forced expiratory flow from 25% to 75% of forced vital capacity (β: -7.06 L/s, 95% CI: -11.04, -2.90). Several other associations were attenuated in final models that controlled for additional biomarkers.ConclusionMonocarboxyisooctyl phthalate was associated with lower respiratory health after controlling for related chemical exposure, which suggests that confounding by multiple chemical exposures should be considered in future research.
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- 2019
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