4.7 Article

Association between prenatal exposure to ambient ozone, birth weight, and macrosomia in healthy women

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PUBLIC HEALTH
Volume 10, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2022.1000269

Keywords

birth weight; macrosomia; ozone; generalized addictive model; birth outcome

Funding

  1. Initial Scientific Research Fund of Young Talent in the Maternal and Child Health Care Hospital of Shandong Province
  2. [ISRFYT-2019-001]

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Studies have shown that prenatal ozone exposure is associated with an increased risk of adverse pregnancy outcomes, particularly abnormal birth weight. However, the relationship between birth weight and ozone exposure remains inconclusive. This study found that prenatal ozone exposure was weakly linked to birth weight but was associated with a decreased risk of macrosomia.
Studies have shown that prenatal ozone exposure is associated with an increased risk of adverse pregnancy outcomes, among which abnormal birth weight is a detrimental factor for diseases in adulthood, but the association between birth weight and ozone is inconclusive. Herein, we conducted this study by enrolling 407 couples of pregnant women and collected their demographical materials, their exposure to ambient ozone was assessed according to the place of their residence. The hourly monitored ozone was first averaged to the daily level, then monthly and whole-gestationally levels. After adjusting confounders, we processed a multivariate generalized addictive analysis to predict the association between prenatal ozone exposure and birth weight. We also divided the cohort into two categories according to whether the infant met the standard of macrosomia, and the occurrence of macrosomia was studied via univariate and multivariate logistic regression analyses as extreme conditions of the effects of ozone exposure on birth weight. We found that the ground-level ozone in Jinan changed with temperature periodically, higher in summer and lower in winter. Over the past 8 years from 2014, the ambient ozone increased by 1.74 mu g/m(3) per year. Of the 407 singleton-pregnant women, 21 infants were diagnosed with macrosomia. After adjusting confounders, we found that each unit increase in prenatal ozone exposure caused 8.80% [OR(ozone)90%CI: 0.912 (0.850, 0.978)] decreased risk of macrosomia, but the splined ambient ozone exposure data was not statistically associated with birth weight, which is probably due to the limited sample size. In conclusion, prenatal ozone exposure is associated with decreased risk of macrosomia but is weakly linked to birth weight.

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