Cargando…
Early life multiple exposures and child cognitive function: A multi-centric birth cohort study in six European countries()
Epidemiological studies mostly focus on single environmental exposures. This study aims to systematically assess associations between a wide range of prenatal and childhood environmental exposures and cognition. The study sample included data of 1298 mother-child pairs, children were 6–11 years-old,...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
---|---|
Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
Elsevier Applied Science Publishers
2021
|
Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8287594/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34077897 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2021.117404 |
_version_ | 1783723938808856576 |
---|---|
author | Julvez, Jordi López-Vicente, Mónica Warembourg, Charline Maitre, Lea Philippat, Claire Gützkow, Kristine B. Guxens, Monica Evandt, Jorunn Andrusaityte, Sandra Burgaleta, Miguel Casas, Maribel Chatzi, Leda de Castro, Montserrat Donaire-González, David Gražulevičienė, Regina Hernandez-Ferrer, Carles Heude, Barbara Mceachan, Rosie Mon-Williams, Mark Nieuwenhuijsen, Mark Robinson, Oliver Sakhi, Amrit K. Sebastian-Galles, Nuria Slama, Remy Sunyer, Jordi Tamayo-Uria, Ibon Thomsen, Cathrine Urquiza, Jose Vafeiadi, Marina Wright, John Basagaña, Xavier Vrijheid, Martine |
author_facet | Julvez, Jordi López-Vicente, Mónica Warembourg, Charline Maitre, Lea Philippat, Claire Gützkow, Kristine B. Guxens, Monica Evandt, Jorunn Andrusaityte, Sandra Burgaleta, Miguel Casas, Maribel Chatzi, Leda de Castro, Montserrat Donaire-González, David Gražulevičienė, Regina Hernandez-Ferrer, Carles Heude, Barbara Mceachan, Rosie Mon-Williams, Mark Nieuwenhuijsen, Mark Robinson, Oliver Sakhi, Amrit K. Sebastian-Galles, Nuria Slama, Remy Sunyer, Jordi Tamayo-Uria, Ibon Thomsen, Cathrine Urquiza, Jose Vafeiadi, Marina Wright, John Basagaña, Xavier Vrijheid, Martine |
author_sort | Julvez, Jordi |
collection | PubMed |
description | Epidemiological studies mostly focus on single environmental exposures. This study aims to systematically assess associations between a wide range of prenatal and childhood environmental exposures and cognition. The study sample included data of 1298 mother-child pairs, children were 6–11 years-old, from six European birth cohorts. We measured 87 exposures during pregnancy and 122 cross-sectionally during childhood, including air pollution, built environment, meteorology, natural spaces, traffic, noise, chemicals and life styles. The measured cognitive domains were fluid intelligence (Raven's Coloured Progressive Matrices test, CPM), attention (Attention Network Test, ANT) and working memory (N-Back task). We used two statistical approaches to assess associations between exposure and child cognition: the exposome-wide association study (ExWAS) considering each exposure independently, and the deletion-substitution-addition algorithm (DSA) considering all exposures simultaneously to build a final multiexposure model. Based on this multiexposure model that included the exposure variables selected by ExWAS and DSA models, child organic food intake was associated with higher fluid intelligence (CPM) scores (beta = 1.18; 95% CI = 0.50, 1.87) and higher working memory (N-Back) scores (0.23; 0.05, 0.41), and child fast food intake (−1.25; −2.10, −0.40), house crowding (−0.39; −0.62, −0.16), and child environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) (−0.89; −1.42, −0.35), were all associated with lower CPM scores. Indoor PM(2.5) exposure was associated with lower N-Back scores (−0.09; −0.16, −0.02). Additional associations in the unexpected direction were found: Higher prenatal mercury levels, maternal alcohol consumption and child higher perfluorooctane sulfonic acid (PFOS) levels were associated with better cognitive performance; and higher green exposure during pregnancy with lower cognitive performance. This first comprehensive and systematic study of many prenatal and childhood environmental risk factors suggests that unfavourable child nutrition, family crowdedness and child indoor air pollution and ETS exposures adversely and cross-sectionally associate with cognitive function. Unexpected associations were also observed and maybe due to confounding and reverse causality. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-8287594 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2021 |
publisher | Elsevier Applied Science Publishers |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-82875942021-09-01 Early life multiple exposures and child cognitive function: A multi-centric birth cohort study in six European countries() Julvez, Jordi López-Vicente, Mónica Warembourg, Charline Maitre, Lea Philippat, Claire Gützkow, Kristine B. Guxens, Monica Evandt, Jorunn Andrusaityte, Sandra Burgaleta, Miguel Casas, Maribel Chatzi, Leda de Castro, Montserrat Donaire-González, David Gražulevičienė, Regina Hernandez-Ferrer, Carles Heude, Barbara Mceachan, Rosie Mon-Williams, Mark Nieuwenhuijsen, Mark Robinson, Oliver Sakhi, Amrit K. Sebastian-Galles, Nuria Slama, Remy Sunyer, Jordi Tamayo-Uria, Ibon Thomsen, Cathrine Urquiza, Jose Vafeiadi, Marina Wright, John Basagaña, Xavier Vrijheid, Martine Environ Pollut Article Epidemiological studies mostly focus on single environmental exposures. This study aims to systematically assess associations between a wide range of prenatal and childhood environmental exposures and cognition. The study sample included data of 1298 mother-child pairs, children were 6–11 years-old, from six European birth cohorts. We measured 87 exposures during pregnancy and 122 cross-sectionally during childhood, including air pollution, built environment, meteorology, natural spaces, traffic, noise, chemicals and life styles. The measured cognitive domains were fluid intelligence (Raven's Coloured Progressive Matrices test, CPM), attention (Attention Network Test, ANT) and working memory (N-Back task). We used two statistical approaches to assess associations between exposure and child cognition: the exposome-wide association study (ExWAS) considering each exposure independently, and the deletion-substitution-addition algorithm (DSA) considering all exposures simultaneously to build a final multiexposure model. Based on this multiexposure model that included the exposure variables selected by ExWAS and DSA models, child organic food intake was associated with higher fluid intelligence (CPM) scores (beta = 1.18; 95% CI = 0.50, 1.87) and higher working memory (N-Back) scores (0.23; 0.05, 0.41), and child fast food intake (−1.25; −2.10, −0.40), house crowding (−0.39; −0.62, −0.16), and child environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) (−0.89; −1.42, −0.35), were all associated with lower CPM scores. Indoor PM(2.5) exposure was associated with lower N-Back scores (−0.09; −0.16, −0.02). Additional associations in the unexpected direction were found: Higher prenatal mercury levels, maternal alcohol consumption and child higher perfluorooctane sulfonic acid (PFOS) levels were associated with better cognitive performance; and higher green exposure during pregnancy with lower cognitive performance. This first comprehensive and systematic study of many prenatal and childhood environmental risk factors suggests that unfavourable child nutrition, family crowdedness and child indoor air pollution and ETS exposures adversely and cross-sectionally associate with cognitive function. Unexpected associations were also observed and maybe due to confounding and reverse causality. Elsevier Applied Science Publishers 2021-09-01 /pmc/articles/PMC8287594/ /pubmed/34077897 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2021.117404 Text en © 2021 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/). |
spellingShingle | Article Julvez, Jordi López-Vicente, Mónica Warembourg, Charline Maitre, Lea Philippat, Claire Gützkow, Kristine B. Guxens, Monica Evandt, Jorunn Andrusaityte, Sandra Burgaleta, Miguel Casas, Maribel Chatzi, Leda de Castro, Montserrat Donaire-González, David Gražulevičienė, Regina Hernandez-Ferrer, Carles Heude, Barbara Mceachan, Rosie Mon-Williams, Mark Nieuwenhuijsen, Mark Robinson, Oliver Sakhi, Amrit K. Sebastian-Galles, Nuria Slama, Remy Sunyer, Jordi Tamayo-Uria, Ibon Thomsen, Cathrine Urquiza, Jose Vafeiadi, Marina Wright, John Basagaña, Xavier Vrijheid, Martine Early life multiple exposures and child cognitive function: A multi-centric birth cohort study in six European countries() |
title | Early life multiple exposures and child cognitive function: A multi-centric birth cohort study in six European countries() |
title_full | Early life multiple exposures and child cognitive function: A multi-centric birth cohort study in six European countries() |
title_fullStr | Early life multiple exposures and child cognitive function: A multi-centric birth cohort study in six European countries() |
title_full_unstemmed | Early life multiple exposures and child cognitive function: A multi-centric birth cohort study in six European countries() |
title_short | Early life multiple exposures and child cognitive function: A multi-centric birth cohort study in six European countries() |
title_sort | early life multiple exposures and child cognitive function: a multi-centric birth cohort study in six european countries() |
topic | Article |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8287594/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34077897 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2021.117404 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT julvezjordi earlylifemultipleexposuresandchildcognitivefunctionamulticentricbirthcohortstudyinsixeuropeancountries AT lopezvicentemonica earlylifemultipleexposuresandchildcognitivefunctionamulticentricbirthcohortstudyinsixeuropeancountries AT warembourgcharline earlylifemultipleexposuresandchildcognitivefunctionamulticentricbirthcohortstudyinsixeuropeancountries AT maitrelea earlylifemultipleexposuresandchildcognitivefunctionamulticentricbirthcohortstudyinsixeuropeancountries AT philippatclaire earlylifemultipleexposuresandchildcognitivefunctionamulticentricbirthcohortstudyinsixeuropeancountries AT gutzkowkristineb earlylifemultipleexposuresandchildcognitivefunctionamulticentricbirthcohortstudyinsixeuropeancountries AT guxensmonica earlylifemultipleexposuresandchildcognitivefunctionamulticentricbirthcohortstudyinsixeuropeancountries AT evandtjorunn earlylifemultipleexposuresandchildcognitivefunctionamulticentricbirthcohortstudyinsixeuropeancountries AT andrusaitytesandra earlylifemultipleexposuresandchildcognitivefunctionamulticentricbirthcohortstudyinsixeuropeancountries AT burgaletamiguel earlylifemultipleexposuresandchildcognitivefunctionamulticentricbirthcohortstudyinsixeuropeancountries AT casasmaribel earlylifemultipleexposuresandchildcognitivefunctionamulticentricbirthcohortstudyinsixeuropeancountries AT chatzileda earlylifemultipleexposuresandchildcognitivefunctionamulticentricbirthcohortstudyinsixeuropeancountries AT decastromontserrat earlylifemultipleexposuresandchildcognitivefunctionamulticentricbirthcohortstudyinsixeuropeancountries AT donairegonzalezdavid earlylifemultipleexposuresandchildcognitivefunctionamulticentricbirthcohortstudyinsixeuropeancountries AT grazulevicieneregina earlylifemultipleexposuresandchildcognitivefunctionamulticentricbirthcohortstudyinsixeuropeancountries AT hernandezferrercarles earlylifemultipleexposuresandchildcognitivefunctionamulticentricbirthcohortstudyinsixeuropeancountries AT heudebarbara earlylifemultipleexposuresandchildcognitivefunctionamulticentricbirthcohortstudyinsixeuropeancountries AT mceachanrosie earlylifemultipleexposuresandchildcognitivefunctionamulticentricbirthcohortstudyinsixeuropeancountries AT monwilliamsmark earlylifemultipleexposuresandchildcognitivefunctionamulticentricbirthcohortstudyinsixeuropeancountries AT nieuwenhuijsenmark earlylifemultipleexposuresandchildcognitivefunctionamulticentricbirthcohortstudyinsixeuropeancountries AT robinsonoliver earlylifemultipleexposuresandchildcognitivefunctionamulticentricbirthcohortstudyinsixeuropeancountries AT sakhiamritk earlylifemultipleexposuresandchildcognitivefunctionamulticentricbirthcohortstudyinsixeuropeancountries AT sebastiangallesnuria earlylifemultipleexposuresandchildcognitivefunctionamulticentricbirthcohortstudyinsixeuropeancountries AT slamaremy earlylifemultipleexposuresandchildcognitivefunctionamulticentricbirthcohortstudyinsixeuropeancountries AT sunyerjordi earlylifemultipleexposuresandchildcognitivefunctionamulticentricbirthcohortstudyinsixeuropeancountries AT tamayouriaibon earlylifemultipleexposuresandchildcognitivefunctionamulticentricbirthcohortstudyinsixeuropeancountries AT thomsencathrine earlylifemultipleexposuresandchildcognitivefunctionamulticentricbirthcohortstudyinsixeuropeancountries AT urquizajose earlylifemultipleexposuresandchildcognitivefunctionamulticentricbirthcohortstudyinsixeuropeancountries AT vafeiadimarina earlylifemultipleexposuresandchildcognitivefunctionamulticentricbirthcohortstudyinsixeuropeancountries AT wrightjohn earlylifemultipleexposuresandchildcognitivefunctionamulticentricbirthcohortstudyinsixeuropeancountries AT basaganaxavier earlylifemultipleexposuresandchildcognitivefunctionamulticentricbirthcohortstudyinsixeuropeancountries AT vrijheidmartine earlylifemultipleexposuresandchildcognitivefunctionamulticentricbirthcohortstudyinsixeuropeancountries |