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Investigating Exposure and Hazards of Micro- and Nanoplastics During Pregnancy and Early Life (AURORA Project): Protocol for an Interdisciplinary Study

Authors :
Amanda M Durkin
Runyu Zou
Justin M Boucher
Matthew SP Boyles
Jeske van Boxel
Mariona Bustamante
Emily A Christopher
Payam Dadvand
Hanna M Dusza
Majorie van Duursen
Markus M Forsberg
Karen S Galea
Juliette Legler
Laurens DB Mandemaker
Florian Meirer
Jane Muncke
Tim S Nawrot
Petra Přibylová
Anna R Robuck
Nelly D Saenen
Barbara M Scholz-Böttcher
Kuanliang Shao
Martine Vrijheid
Douglas I Walker
Lisa Zimmermann
Laura M Zoutendijk
Virissa Lenters
Roel Vermeulen
Source :
JMIR Research Protocols, Vol 13, p e63176 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
JMIR Publications, 2024.

Abstract

BackgroundMicro- and nanoplastics (MNPs) are emerging pollutants of concern with ubiquitous presence in global ecosystems. MNPs pose potential implications for human health; however, the health impacts of MNP exposures are not yet understood. Recent evidence suggests that MNPs can cross the placental barrier, underlying the urgent need to understand their impact on reproductive health and development. ObjectiveThe Actionable eUropean ROadmap for early-life health Risk Assessment of micro- and nanoplastics (AURORA) project will investigate MNP exposures and their biological and health effects during pregnancy and early life, which are critical periods due to heightened vulnerability to environmental stressors. The AURORA project will enhance exposure assessment capabilities for measuring MNPs, MNP-associated chemicals, and plastic additives in human tissues, including placenta and blood. MethodsIn this interdisciplinary project, we will advance methods for in-depth characterization and scalable chemical analytical strategies, enabling high-resolution and large-scale toxicological, exposure assessment, and epidemiological studies. The AURORA project performs observational studies to investigate determinants and health impacts of MNPs by including 800 mother-child pairs from 2 existing birth cohorts and 110 women of reproductive age from a newly established cohort. This will be complemented by toxicological studies using a tiered-testing approach and epidemiological investigations to evaluate associations between maternal and prenatal MNP exposures and health perturbations, such as placental function, immune-inflammatory responses, oxidative stress, accelerated aging, endocrine disruption, and child growth and development. The ultimate goal of the AURORA project is to create an MNP risk assessment framework and identify the remaining knowledge gaps and priorities needed to comprehensively assess the impact of MNPs on early-life health. ResultsIn the first 3 years of this 5-year project (2021-2026), progress was made toward all objectives. This includes completion of recruitment and data collection for new and existing cohorts, development of analytical methodological protocols, and initiation of the toxicological tiered assessments. As of September 2024, data analysis is ongoing and results are expected to be published starting in 2025. ConclusionsAs plastic pollution increases globally, it is imperative to understand the impact of MNPs on human health, particularly during vulnerable developmental stages such as early life. The contributions of the AURORA project will inform future risk assessment. International Registered Report Identifier (IRRID)DERR1-10.2196/63176

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19290748
Volume :
13
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
JMIR Research Protocols
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.39bb2e16daea471ab9383dab15d20b77
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2196/63176