April 27, 2016
Study: Even a
Little Air Pollution May Have Long-Term Health Effects on Developing Fetus
Researchers find
biological evidence linking air pollution to intrauterine inflammation, a
condition associated with adverse pregnancy and child outcomes.
Even small amounts of air pollution appear
to raise the risk of a condition in pregnant women linked to premature births
and lifelong neurological and respiratory disorders in their children, new
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health research suggests.
Fine particles from car exhaust, power
plants and other industrial sources are breathed into the lungs, but the
scientists have now found evidence of the effects of that pollution in pregnant
women’s placentas, the organ that connects a mother to her fetus and provides
blood, oxygen and nutrition. They found that the greater the maternal exposure
to air pollution, the more likely the pregnant women suffered from a condition
called intrauterine inflammation, which can increase the risk of a number of
health problems for her child from the fetal stage well into childhood.
The researchers, reporting online April 27
in Environmental Health Perspectives, say the findings add to the
growing evidence that the air a pregnant woman breathes could have long-term
health consequences for her child and that current U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency air pollution standards may not be stringent enough to
protect her developing fetus.
“Twenty years ago, we showed that high
levels of air pollution led to poor pregnancy outcomes, including premature
births. Now we are showing that even small amounts of air pollution appear to
have biological effects at the cellular level in pregnant women,” says the
study’s senior author, Xiaobin Wang, MD, ScD, MPH, the Zanvyl Krieger Professor
and director of the Center on the Early Life Origins of Disease at the
Bloomberg School.
Says the study’s lead author Rebecca Massa
Nachman, PhD, a postdoctoral fellow in Department of Environmental Health
Sciences at the Bloomberg School: “This study raises the concern that even
current standards for air pollution may not be strict enough to protect the
fetus, which may be particularly sensitive to environmental factors. We found
biological effects in women exposed to air pollution levels below the EPA
standard.”
For the study, researchers analyzed data
from 5,059 mother-child pairs in the Boston Birth Cohort, a predominantly
low-income minority population. They assessed the presence of intrauterine
inflammation based on whether the mother had a fever during labor and by
looking under a microscope at the placenta, which was collected and preserved
after birth. They assessed maternal exposure to fine particulate matter (PM2.5)
air pollution using data from EPA air quality stations located near the
mothers’ homes. Boston, where the women lived, is known as a relatively clean
city when it comes to air pollution. The majority of the women in the study
were exposed to air pollution at a level that EPA deems acceptable, fewer than
12 micrograms per cubic meter. A subset of 1,588 women (or 31 percent) were
exposed to air pollution at or above the EPA standard.
The researchers found that pregnant women
who were exposed to the highest levels of air pollution were nearly twice as
likely as those exposed to the lowest levels to have intrauterine inflammation
and it appeared that the first trimester might be a time of highest risk. These
results held up even when researchers accounted for factors including smoking,
age, obesity and education levels.
Intrauterine inflammation is one of the
leading causes of premature birth, which occurs in one of every nine births in
the United States and one in six African-American births, the researchers say.
Babies born prematurely can have lifelong developmental problems. Researchers
have linked preterm birth to both autism and asthma.
While maternal exposure to air pollution
during pregnancy is associated with adverse birth outcomes, the biological
mechanism has not been well understood. There are few outward signs of
intrauterine inflammation in most women. But the researchers say that the
placenta – which is typically discarded after birth – offered vital clues to the
condition and could be the source of other important health information.
“The placenta may be a window into
what is going on in terms of early life exposure and what it means for future
health problems,” Wang says. “This organ is discarded, but testing it is
non-invasive and could be a valuable source of all kinds of environmental
information.”
“Intrauterine
Inflammation and Maternal Exposure to Ambient PM2.5 during Preconception and
Specific Periods of Pregnancy: The Boston Birth Cohort” was written
by Rebecca Massa Nachman, Guangyun Mao, Xingyou Zhang, Xiumei Hong, Zhu Chen,
Claire Sampankanpanich Soria, Huan He, Guoying Wang, Deanna Caruso, Colleen
Pearson, Shyam Biswal, Barry Zuckerman, Marsha Wills-Karp and Xiaobin Wang.
The Boston Birth Cohort is supported in
part by the March of Dimes PERI grants, and the National Institutes of Health’s
National Institutes of Health’s National Institute of Environmental Health
Sciences (R21 ES011666 and T32ES007141) and Eunice Kennedy Shriver National
Institute of Child Health and Human Development (R01 HD041702 and R21HD066471).
Other philanthropic support comes from The Ludwig Family Foundation and the
Zanvyl Krieger Endowment.
# # #
Media contacts for the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health:
Stephanie Desmon at 410-955-7619 or sdesmon1@jhu.edu and Barbara
Benham at 410-614-6029 or bbenham1@jhu.edu
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