4.8 Article

Associations of Autism Spectrum Disorder with PM2.5 Components: A Comparative Study Using Two Different Exposure Models

期刊

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
卷 57, 期 1, 页码 405-414

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AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.2c05197

关键词

PM2; 5; 5 chemical components; autism spectrum disorders; prenatal exposures; exposure models

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This retrospective cohort study examined the associations between prenatal exposure to major fine particulate matter (PM2.5) components and autism spectrum disorder (ASD). The study included 318,750 mother-child pairs and found that pregnancy-average exposure to PM2.5, EC/BC, OM, and SO42- were associated with ASD after adjusting for other factors, while the association with NO3- was least consistent. The effect estimates for EC/BC and OM were larger and more consistent in the first and second trimester, while SO42- was more consistent in the third trimester.
This retrospective cohort study examined associations of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) with prenatal exposure to major fine particulate matter (PM2.5) components estimated using two independent exposure models. The cohort included 318 750 mother-child pairs with singleton deliveries in Kaiser Permanente Southern California hospitals from 2001 to 2014 and followed until age five. ASD cases during follow-up (N = 4559) were identified by ICD codes. Prenatal exposures to PM2.5, elemental (EC) and black carbon (BC), organic matter (OM), nitrate (NO3-), and sulfate (SO42-) were constructed using (i) a source-oriented chemical transport model and (ii) a hybrid model. Exposures were assigned to each maternal address during the entire pregnancy, first, second, and third trimester. In single-pollutant models, ASD was associated with pregnancy-average PM2.5, EC/BC, OM, and SO42- exposures from both exposure models, after adjustment for covariates. The direction of effect estimates was consistent for EC/BC and OM and least consistent for NO3-. EC/BC, OM, and SO42- were generally robust to adjustment for other components and for PM2.5. EC/BC and OM effect estimates were generally larger and more consistent in the first and second trimester and SO42- in the third trimester. Future PM2.5 composition health effect studies might consider using multiple exposure models and a weight of evidence approach when interpreting effect estimates.

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