4.8 Article

The early-life exposome: Description and patterns in six European countries

Journal

ENVIRONMENT INTERNATIONAL
Volume 123, Issue -, Pages 189-200

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envint.2018.11.067

Keywords

Exposome; Environmental exposures; Early life; Pregnancy; Children

Funding

  1. European Commission [308333]
  2. Instituto de Salud Carlos III
  3. CIBERESP
  4. Generalitat de Catalunya-CIRIT
  5. Lithuanian Agency for Science Innovation and Technology [6-04-2014_31V-66]
  6. Norwegian Ministry of Health and Care Services
  7. Ministry of Education and Research
  8. NIH/NIEHS [N01-ES-75558]
  9. NIH/NINDS [1 UO1 NS 047537-01, 2 UO1 NS 047537-06A1]
  10. European project (EU FP6-2003-Food-3-NewGeneris)
  11. European project (EU FP6. STREP Hiwate)
  12. European project (EU FP7) [ENV.2007.1.2.2.2, 211250 Escape, ENV.2008.1.2.1.6, 226285 ENRIECO]
  13. European project (EU) [FP7-2008-ENV-1.2.1.4 Envirogenomarkers]
  14. European project (EU FP7-HEALTH-2009-single stage CHICOS)
  15. European project (EUFP7-HEALTH-2012) [308333 HELIX]
  16. European project (FP7 European Union) [264357 MeDALL]
  17. Greek Ministry of Health
  18. Southern California Environmental Health Sciences Center - National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences [P30ES007048]
  19. Instituto de Salud Carlos III (Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness) [MS16/00128]
  20. Fondation de France [00069251]
  21. MRC [MR/L01341X/1, MR/M501669/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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Characterization of the exposome, the set of all environmental factors that one is exposed to from conception onwards, has been advocated to better understand the role of environmental factors on chronic diseases. Here, we aimed to describe the early-life exposome. Specifically, we focused on the correlations between multiple environmental exposures, their patterns and their variability across European regions and across time (pregnancy and childhood periods). We relied on the Human Early-Life Exposome (HELIX) project, in which 87 environmental exposures during pregnancy and 122 during the childhood period (grouped in 19 exposure groups) were assessed in 1301 pregnant mothers and their children at 6-11 years in 6 European birth cohorts. Some correlations between exposures in the same exposure group reached high values above 0.8. The median correlation within exposure groups was > 0.3 for many exposure groups, reaching 0.69 for water disinfection by products in pregnancy and 0.67 for the meteorological group in childhood. Median correlations between different exposure groups rarely reached 0.3. Some correlations were driven by cohort-level associations (e.g. air pollution and chemicals). Ten principal components explained 45% and 39% of the total variance in the pregnancy and childhood exposome, respectively, while 65 and 90 components were required to explain 95% of the exposome variability. Correlations between maternal (pregnancy) and childhood exposures were high (> 0.6) for most exposures modeled at the residential address (e.g. air pollution), but were much lower and even close to zero for some chemical exposures. In conclusion, the early life exposome was high dimensional, meaning that it cannot easily be measured by or reduced to fewer components. Correlations between exposures from different exposure groups were much lower than within exposure groups, which have important implications for co-exposure confounding in multiple exposure studies. Also, we observed the early life exposome to be variable over time and to vary by cohort, so measurements at one time point or one place will not capture its complexities.

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