| Literature DB >> 16203261 |
Frank Gilliland1, Ed Avol, Patrick Kinney, Michael Jerrett, Timothy Dvonch, Frederick Lurmann, Timothy Buckley, Patrick Breysse, Gerald Keeler, Tracy de Villiers, Rob McConnell.
Abstract
The National Children's Study is considering a wide spectrum of airborne pollutants that are hypothesized to potentially influence pregnancy outcomes, neurodevelopment, asthma, atopy, immune development, obesity, and pubertal development. In this article we summarize six applicable exposure assessment lessons learned from the Centers for Children's Environmental Health and Disease Prevention Research that may enhance the National Children's Study: a) Selecting individual study subjects with a wide range of pollution exposure profiles maximizes spatial-scale exposure contrasts for key pollutants of study interest. b) In studies with large sample sizes, long duration, and diverse outcomes and exposures, exposure assessment efforts should rely on modeling to provide estimates for the entire cohort, supported by subject-derived questionnaire data. c) Assessment of some exposures of interest requires individual measurements of exposures using snapshots of personal and microenvironmental exposures over short periods and/or in selected microenvironments. d) Understanding issues of spatial-temporal correlations of air pollutants, the surrogacy of specific pollutants for components of the complex mixture, and the exposure misclassification inherent in exposure estimates is critical in analysis and interpretation. e) "Usual" temporal, spatial, and physical patterns of activity can be used as modifiers of the exposure/outcome relationships. f) Biomarkers of exposure are useful for evaluation of specific exposures that have multiple routes of exposure. If these lessons are applied, the National Children's Study offers a unique opportunity to assess the adverse effects of air pollution on interrelated health outcomes during the critical early life period.Entities:
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Year: 2005 PMID: 16203261 PMCID: PMC1281294 DOI: 10.1289/ehp.7673
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health Perspect ISSN: 0091-6765 Impact factor: 9.031
Centers for Children’s Environmental Health and Disease Prevention Research air pollution exposure assessment experience relevant to the National Children’s Study.
| Columbia University | Johns Hopkins University | University of Michigan | USC Children’s Health Study | University of Southern California | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sample population | 500 pregnant women enrolled in the third trimester, and children followed from birth through age 5 | ~ 250 children with asthma in urban Baltimore (ages 2–12) | 300 children, moderate to severe asthma, 7–11 years of age at baseline | ~ 6,000 public school children, 9–18 years of age in four specific age cohorts, from 12 southern California communities | 202 Los Angeles public school children, 6–16 years of age with asthma and allergy to house dust mite or cockroach |
| Outcome(s) | Asthma and neurodevelopment; follow-up at multiple time points starting at birth; outcome metrics include questionnaires, biomarkers, clinical assessments, neurobehavioral assessments | Asthma severity | Daily symptom diaries and pulmonary function (PEF, FEV1) | Pulmonary function (PFTs), symptoms (from annual medical and residential histories for 10 years), school-reported absences, food-frequency dietary information, physical activity, smoking and ETS, GxE interactions | Asthma severity |
| Study design | Prospective birth cohort study with exposures and outcomes measured at multiple time points starting during the third trimester of pregnancy | Longitudinal intervention trial ( | Longitudinal intervention trial | Cross-sectional survey ( | Randomized trial of allergen-reduction strategies |
| Agents assessed | Personal PAH and pesticide exposures of mother in third trimester; dust allergens prenatal, 12 months, 36 months, and 60 months; indoor/outdoor PM2.5, black carbon, and NO2 at 12 months in subset; biomarkers for ETS, PAH–DNA adducts, pesticides | Indoor/outdoor air pollutants (PM10, PM2.5, O3, nicotine); airborne endotoxin and mouse allergen; allergens in reservoir dust (cockroach, mouse, dust mite, cat, dog) | Personal/indoor/outdoor air pollutants (PM10, PM2.5, O3, nicotine); PM components (trace elements, EC, OC, endotoxin) | Outdoor air pollutants [O3, NO2, PM10, PM2.5, acid vapor (HNO3, formic, acetic) EC, OC, PM speciation (SO4, NO3, NH4, CI)], PAHs, endotoxin, air toxics, ETS, cigarette smoke | Settled allergens (dust mite and cockroach) and endotoxin; cockroach counts |
| Other exposure determinants | GIS assessment of traffic proximity; social condition and stress; home characteristics | Home inspection, time– activity data, GIS location, meteorology | Home inspection, time– activity data, GIS location, meteorology | Annual residential history by written survey; time–activity data, GIS location, traffic density, and proximity | Housing characteristics and condition, reported and observed behavior, humidity and moisture |
| Assessment strategy | Prenatal exposures to PAH based on personal sampling and cord blood PAH–DNA adducts at birth; allergen exposures based on dust measures; postnatal air pollution exposures based on prediction model developed in subset | Primary exposure assignment based on indoor air pollutants, and allergens; secondary exposure assignment using microenvironmental model with indoor/outdoor air pollution combined with time–activity information | Primary exposure assignment using personal/indoor/outdoor air pollutants; secondary exposure assignment using microenvironmental model | Primary exposure assignment based on community ambient monitors; secondary exposure assignment using microenvironmental model with outdoor air pollution combined with home characteristics and time– activity information | Assessment of only indoor settled dust; no outdoor assessment |
Abbreviations: CI, chlorine; EC, elemental carbon; FEV1, forced expiratory volume in 1 sec; GIS, geographic information system; GxE, gene–environment interaction; OC, organic carbon; PEF, peak expiratory flow; PFT, pulmonary function test.
Spatial scales of variability for ambient air pollutants.
| Compound | Regional scale (100–1,000 km) | Urban scale (4–50 km) | Neighborhood scale (50 m to 4 km) | Household scale (≤50 m) outdoors and indoor |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primary PM2.5 constituents | ||||
| EC from combustion | x | x | x | |
| Organics, including PAHs | x | x | ||
| Metals, including chromium VI, cadmium, lead, beryllium, nickel, arsenic, iron, manganese | x | x | x | |
| Other constituents from road dust, wood smoke, construction dust, and industrial sources | x | x | ||
| Secondary PM2.5 constituents | ||||
| Sulfate | x | |||
| Nitrate | x | x | ||
| Ammonium | x | x | ||
| Secondary organics | x | x | ||
| Primary PM2.5–10 constituents | ||||
| Organics, including PAHs | x | x | x | |
| Metals, including chromium VI, cadmium, lead, beryllium, nickel, arsenic, iron, manganese | x | x | ||
| Other constituents from road dust, wood smoke, construction dust, and industrial sources | x | x | ||
| Primary PM > 10 constituents | ||||
| Pollen grains | x | x | ||
| O3 | x | x | ||
| Nitric oxide | x | x | ||
| NO2 | x | x | ||
| Sulfur dioxide | x | x | ||
| Carbon monoxide | x | x | ||
| Volatile organic compounds | ||||
| Benzene | x | x | ||
| 1,3-Butadiene | x | x | ||
| Formaldehyde | x | x | ||
| Acetaldehyde | x | x | ||
| Acrolein | x | x | ||
| Vinyl chloride | x | x | ||
| Carbon tetrachloride | x | x | ||
| Chloroform | x | x | ||
| Propylene dichloride | x | x | ||
| Methyl chloride | x | x | ||
| Trichloroethylene | x | x | ||
| Tetrachloroethylene | x | x | ||
| Naphthalene | x | x | ||
| Mercury | x | x | ||
Bioaerosols, including endotoxin, house dust allergens, fungal spores, and pollen grains, also vary considerably on the household and neighborhood scales; however, they were not included in this analysis.