Maternal Exposure to Particulate Air Pollution and Term Birth Weight: A Multi-Country Evaluation of Effect and Heterogeneity

Payam Dadvand(Center for Research in Environmental Epidemiology), Jennifer D. Parker(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Michelle L. Bell(Yale University), Matteo Bonzini(University of Insubria), Michael Bräuer(University of British Columbia), Lyndsey A. Darrow(Emory University), Ulrike Gehring(Utrecht University), Svetlana V. Glinianaia(Newcastle University), Nélson Gouveia(Universidade de São Paulo), Eun‐Hee Ha(Ewha Womans University), Jong‐Han Leem(Inha University), Edith H. van den Hooven, Bin Jalaludin(UNSW Sydney), Bill M. Jesdale(University of California, Berkeley), Johanna Lepeule(Inserm), Rachel Morello‐Frosch(University of California, Berkeley), Geoffrey Morgan(The University of Sydney), Angela Cecilia Pesatori(University of Milan), Frank H. Pierik, Tanja Pless‐Mulloli(Newcastle University), David Q. Rich(University of Rochester), Sheela Sathyanarayana(Seattle Children's Hospital), Ju‐Hee Seo(Ewha Womans University), Rémy Slama(Inserm), Matthew J. Strickland(Emory University), Lillian Tamburic(University of British Columbia), Daniel Wartenberg(Johnson University), Mark Nieuwenhuijsen(Center for Research in Environmental Epidemiology), Tracey J. Woodruff(University of California, San Francisco)
Environmental Health Perspectives
February 6, 2013
Cited by 429Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: A growing body of evidence has associated maternal exposure to air pollution with adverse effects on fetal growth; however, the existing literature is inconsistent. OBJECTIVES: We aimed to quantify the association between maternal exposure to particulate air pollution and term birth weight and low birth weight (LBW) across 14 centers from 9 countries, and to explore the influence of site characteristics and exposure assessment methods on between-center heterogeneity in this association. METHODS: Using a common analytical protocol, International Collaboration on Air Pollution and Pregnancy Outcomes (ICAPPO) centers generated effect estimates for term LBW and continuous birth weight associated with PM(10) and PM(2.5) (particulate matter ≤ 10 and 2.5 µm). We used meta-analysis to combine the estimates of effect across centers (~ 3 million births) and used meta-regression to evaluate the influence of center characteristics and exposure assessment methods on between-center heterogeneity in reported effect estimates. RESULTS: In random-effects meta-analyses, term LBW was positively associated with a 10-μg/m3 increase in PM10 [odds ratio (OR) = 1.03; 95% CI: 1.01, 1.05] and PM(2.5) (OR = 1.10; 95% CI: 1.03, 1.18) exposure during the entire pregnancy, adjusted for maternal socioeconomic status. A 10-μg/m3 increase in PM(10) exposure was also negatively associated with term birth weight as a continuous outcome in the fully adjusted random-effects meta-analyses (-8.9 g; 95% CI: -13.2, -4.6 g). Meta-regressions revealed that centers with higher median PM(2.5) levels and PM(2.5):PM(10) ratios, and centers that used a temporal exposure assessment (compared with spatiotemporal), tended to report stronger associations. CONCLUSION: Maternal exposure to particulate pollution was associated with LBW at term across study populations. We detected three site characteristics and aspects of exposure assessment methodology that appeared to contribute to the variation in associations reported by centers.


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