| Literature DB >> 21156395 |
Heather E Volk1, Irva Hertz-Picciotto, Lora Delwiche, Fred Lurmann, Rob McConnell.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Little is known about environmental causes and contributing factors for autism. Basic science and epidemiologic research suggest that oxidative stress and inflammation may play a role in disease development. Traffic-related air pollution, a common exposure with established effects on these pathways, contains substances found to have adverse prenatal effects.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21156395 PMCID: PMC3114825 DOI: 10.1289/ehp.1002835
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health Perspect ISSN: 0091-6765 Impact factor: 9.031
Demographic characteristics of CHARGE cases with autism and controls with typical development (n = 563).
| Demographic variable | Percent ( | Chi-square | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cases ( | Controls ( | ||
| Male sex | 87 (263) | 81 (211) | 0.10 |
| Child race/ethnicity | 0.21 | ||
| White | 51 (154) | 51 (131) | |
| Hispanic | 29 (88) | 30 (77) | |
| Black | 3 (8) | 2 (5) | |
| Asian | 7 (21) | 3 (8) | |
| Other | 11 (33) | 15 (38) | |
| Maximum education in home | 0.88 | ||
| High school or less | 7 (22) | 8 (22) | |
| Some college | 31 (95) | 31 (79) | |
| Bachelor degree | 35 (107) | 36 (93) | |
| Graduate or professional degree | 26 (80) | 25 (65) | |
| Maternal smoking during pregnancy | 9 (27) | 7 (18) | 0.40 |
| Maternal age ≥ 35 years | 28 (85) | 25 (65) | 0.44 |
| Preterm delivery (< 259 days) | 11 (32) | 10 (25) | 0.73 |
“Other” refers to mixed race/ethnicity or other reported race/ethnicity, including Native American, Indian, East Indian, Cuban, or Mexican American.
Mother reported smoking at any time during pregnancy.
Equivalent to 37 completed weeks.
Exposure ORs (95% CIs) for autism, by category of distance from residence to the nearest freeway at time of birth (n = 563).
| Exposure category | Crude | Adjusted | |
|---|---|---|---|
| < 309 m from freeway (closest 10%) | 38/19 | 1.86 (1.04–3.45) | 1.86 (1.03–3.45) |
| 309–647 m from freeway (10th to 25th percentile) | 43/41 | 0.98 (0.60–1.59) | 0.96 (0.58–1.56) |
| 647–1,419 m from freeway (25th to 50th percentile) | 77/63 | 1.14 (0.76–1.71) | 1.11 (0.73–1.67) |
| > 1,419 m from freeway (further 50%) | 146/136 | Reference | Reference |
Model was adjusted for child sex (male vs. female), child race/ethnicity (Hispanic vs. white, black/Asian/other vs. white), maximum education of parents (parent with highest of four levels: college degree or higher vs. some high school, high school degree, or some college education), maternal age (> 35 years vs. ≤ 35 years), and maternal smoking during pregnancy (mother reported any smoking during pregnancy vs. mother reported no smoking during pregnancy)
Exposure ORs (95% CIs) for autism, by category of distance from residence to the nearest major road at time of birth (n = 563).
| Exposure category | Crude | Adjusted | |
|---|---|---|---|
| ≤ 42 m from major road (closest 10%) | 28/30 | 0.80 (0.45–1.41) | 0.71 (0.39–1.26) |
| 42–96 m from major road (10th to 25th percentile) | 54/32 | 1.44 (0.88–2.39) | 1.29 (0.77–2.18) |
| 96–209 m from major road (25th to 50th percentile) | 71/68 | 0.89 (0.59–1.34) | 0.83 (0.55–1.26) |
| > 209 m from major road (further 50%) | 151/129 | Reference | Reference |
Model was adjusted for child sex (male vs. female), child race/ethnicity (Hispanic vs. white, black/Asian/other vs. white), maximum education of parents (parent with the highest of four levels: college degree or more education vs. some high school, high school degree, or some college education), maternal age (> 35 years vs. ≤ 35 years), and maternal smoking during pregnancy (mother reported any smoking during pregnancy vs. mother reported no smoking during pregnancy), and freeway distance categories (< 309 m, 309–647 m, 647–1,419 m vs. referent of > 1,419 m).