| Literature DB >> 18560536 |
Rémy Slama1, Lyndsey Darrow, Jennifer Parker, Tracey J Woodruff, Matthew Strickland, Mark Nieuwenhuijsen, Svetlana Glinianaia, Katherine J Hoggatt, Srimathi Kannan, Fintan Hurley, Jaroslaw Kalinka, Radim Srám, Michael Brauer, Michelle Wilhelm, Joachim Heinrich, Beate Ritz.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is a growing body of epidemiologic literature reporting associations between atmospheric pollutants and reproductive outcomes, particularly birth weight and gestational duration.Entities:
Keywords: atmospheric pollution; bias; birth weight; environment; exposure assessment; fecundity; geographic information system; intrauterine growth restriction; particulate matter; pregnancy; reproduction; small for gestational age
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18560536 PMCID: PMC2430236 DOI: 10.1289/ehp.11074
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health Perspect ISSN: 0091-6765 Impact factor: 9.031
Overview of current evidence concerning the possible effects of air pollutants on human reproduction.
| Reproductive health outcome (strength of evidence) | Exposure assessment | Study design | Illustrative references |
|---|---|---|---|
| Male reproductive health | |||
| Semen quality (−/+) | AQMS, biomarkers | Longitudinal or cross-sectional | |
| Female reproductive health | |||
| Hormonal function (LD) | Experimental (rats) | ||
| Couples’ fecundity (LD) | AQMS | Pregnancy-based retrospective study; experimental (mice) | |
| Pregnancy and fetal health | |||
| Stillbirth (LD) | AQMS | Time series | |
| Prematurity (−/+) | AQMS | Birth register–based study; time series | |
| Congenital malformations (−/+) | AQMS | Birth defect register–based study | |
| Intrauterine growth, birth weight (+) | AQMS, biomarkers, LUR, personal monitoring | Birth register–based study; cohorts of pregnant women; experimental | |
| Secondary sex-ratio (LD) | AQMS | Birth register–based study and experiment (mice) | |
| Postnatal health | |||
| Infant death (+) | AQMS | Case–control study relying on birth/death certificates. | |
| Transgenerational effects | |||
| Heritable mutation rate (LD) | Personal monitoring | Experimental (mice) | |
Abbreviations: +, suggestive evidence; −/+, mixed or yet inconclusive results; AQMS, air quality monitoring stations; LD, limited data, indicates outcomes little or not studied; LUR, land-use regression models.
Figure 1Hypothesized relations between air pollution, IUGR, and extraneous factors possibly acting as confounders in an epidemiologic study of air pollution effects on IUGR. Abbreviations: ETS, environmental tobacco smoke; BMI, body mass index; SES, marker of socioeconomic status (e.g., maternal education). Arrows indicate plausible effects of a factor over another not mediated by another factor present in the diagram. A dotted arrow indicates a plausible although not established relation. An arrow from a factor A that intersects an arrow from B to C indicates that A may modify the effect of B on C (Weinberg 2007).
Figure 2Possible biological mechanisms by which air pollutants could influence IUGR or prematurity. IL, interleukin.
Suggested reproductive outcomes to study in relation to atmospheric pollutants.
| Prepregnancy events | Pregnancy events | Postpregnancy events |
|---|---|---|
| Time to pregnancy | Spontaneous abortions, stillbirths | Placental size, weight |
| Semen quality | Maternal hypertension, pulse pressure | Testicle, penis sizes |
| Menstrual cycle | Preeclampsia | Ano-genital distance (males) |
| Proteomic markers of sperm function | Fetal ultrasound measurements | Kidney size (boys and girls) |
| Fetal growth velocity | Dubowitz or Ballard scores | |
| Birth weight ( | ||
| Transcriptomic analysis | ||
| Symmetric vs. asymmetric growth restriction | ||
| Doppler umbilical artery velocimetry | ||
| Birth defects | ||
| Sex ratio |
Both exposure in adulthood and during intrauterine life are worth considering (e.g., Jensen et al. 2004).
Lefievre et al. (2007).
See, for example, Buffat et al. (2007).
Recommended points to report in epidemiologic studies of the effects of air pollutants on human reproduction.
| Topic | Points to report |
|---|---|
| Population | Characteristics of excluded subjects [see, e.g., |
| Health outcome | Indicate all health outcomes examined |
| Birth weight for gestation standards used for SGA classification | |
| Methods for determining gestational age | |
| Exposure | Rationale behind monitoring station buffer area size, if applicable |
| Type of monitoring stations used (e.g., background, source oriented sites) | |
| Distribution of exposure during the considered time-windows | |
| Correlation between (window-specific) exposure variables [see, e.g., Table 5 in | |
| Information used to geocode addresses (e.g., ZIP code only vs. street address) | |
| Other covariates | Which socioeconomic factors (or their proxies) were tested, and how do they relate to the exposure and outcome? |
| Statistical analysis | Check for nonlinear relations between exposure and outcome |
| Indicate which adjustment factors had the greatest influence on the estimated effect of exposure |
SGA, small for gestational age.
For more general recommendations on points to report see, for example, von Elm et al. (2007).