| Literature DB >> 25805254 |
Tim K Takaro1, James A Scott2, Ryan W Allen1, Sonia S Anand3, Allan B Becker4, A Dean Befus5, Michael Brauer6, Joanne Duncan3, Diana L Lefebvre3, Wendy Lou2, Piush J Mandhane5, Kathleen E McLean1, Gregory Miller7, Hind Sbihi6, Huan Shu1,8, Padmaja Subbarao2,9, Stuart E Turvey6, Amanda J Wheeler10,11, Leilei Zeng12, Malcolm R Sears3, Jeffrey R Brook2,13.
Abstract
The Canadian Healthy Infant Longitudinal Development birth cohort was designed to elucidate interactions between environment and genetics underlying development of asthma and allergy. Over 3600 pregnant mothers were recruited from the general population in four provinces with diverse environments. The child is followed to age 5 years, with prospective characterization of diverse exposures during this critical period. Key exposure domains include indoor and outdoor air pollutants, inhalation, ingestion and dermal uptake of chemicals, mold, dampness, biological allergens, pets and pests, housing structure, and living behavior, together with infections, nutrition, psychosocial environment, and medications. Assessments of early life exposures are focused on those linked to inflammatory responses driven by the acquired and innate immune systems. Mothers complete extensive environmental questionnaires including time-activity behavior at recruitment and when the child is 3, 6, 12, 24, 30, 36, 48, and 60 months old. House dust collected during a thorough home assessment at 3-4 months, and biological specimens obtained for multiple exposure-related measurements, are archived for analyses. Geo-locations of homes and daycares and land-use regression for estimating traffic-related air pollution complement time-activity-behavior data to provide comprehensive individual exposure profiles. Several analytical frameworks are proposed to address the many interacting exposure variables and potential issues of co-linearity in this complex data set.Entities:
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Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25805254 PMCID: PMC4611361 DOI: 10.1038/jes.2015.7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Expo Sci Environ Epidemiol ISSN: 1559-0631 Impact factor: 5.563
Figure 1Interacting risk factors measured in the CHILD study, including multiple environmental, infective, nutritional and psychosocial exposures; genetics; lung function; and microbiome, resulting in immunological and clinical phenotypic outcomes.
Physical environmental exposure domains characterized for CHILD study subjects.
| General home characteristics and performance | •General home characteristics (e.g., date of construction, renovations, size, proximity to outdoor pollution sources) •Living space and related behaviors (e.g., location of living space within home, number of occupants per m3) | Air pollution and infiltration Moisture hazard from occupancy and leakage |
| Floors, walls, and furniture | •Laminate, soft vinyl or hard vinyl floors Walls painted <6 months before inspection Oriented strand board, PVC, plastic or vinyl wall, or window coverings •Pressed wood, plastic or vinyl furniture, plastic toys, laser or inkjet printers | Semi-volatile and volatile chemicals including phthalates, formaldehyde, ultrafine particles |
| Second-hand smoke | •Smoking reported at the subject's home •Smoke exposure reported on subject's time-activity | Tobacco and nicotine |
| Heating, cooking, and ventilation | •Location and age of furnace, condition of furnace filter •Use of gas appliances; ozone-generating air purifiers •Wood or pellets used for home heating | NO2, CO, ozone, particulate matter |
| Cleaning and chemical products | •Use and storage of cleaning and other household products including: air fresheners, floor and furniture polish, scented candles, incense, scented laundry detergent, fabric softeners and solvents •Pesticides | SVOCs, VOCs, PM |
| Personal and child-care products | •Diaper creams, baby wipes, shampoo and lotion, medications, adult personal-care products •Pacifier, soft plastic toys, teething rings | Semi-volatile and volatile chemicals including phthalates |
| Moisture indicators | •Earthy, moldy, or musty odor detected during inspection •Presence and use of humidifier, sump pump, aquarium •Four or more houseplants in one room •Exhaust fans in kitchen or bathroom not used or not present •Indoor sauna, hot-tub, or swimming pool •Condensation on windows in cold weather •Clothes dryer exhausts into house | Mold, dampness, endotoxin |
| Water leaks | •Evidence of water leaks during home inspection, mold dampness •Water leaks reported on questionnaire | Mold, dampness, endotoxin |
| Mold indicators | •Mold seen or suspected during home inspection | Mold |
| Pets | •Furred pets present in home | Allergens, endotoxin |
| Pests | •Evidence of mice, cockroaches, or other pests reported during home inspection or by questionnaire •Pest control efforts (professional or occupant treatments, type of control agent or practice) | Dampness, allergens |
| Swimming pools and hot-tubs | •Pool or hot-tub at home or building •Use of chlorine and/or bromine | Chloramine/disinfection by-products |
| Garages | •Engine emissions and fumes from parking garage entering home •Attached garage used for vehicles •Attached garage used for storage of chemical products | VOCs, PM, CO, NO2 |
| Take-home occupational exposures | •Household member works with hazardous materials •Behaviors potentially affecting family's exposure: changing work clothes and shoes, showering, laundering work clothes | Take-home chemical exposures |
| Traffic-related air pollution | •Home location •Travel behavior | Air pollution, noise, and moisture |
| Dust | •Area-based dust loading measured on flooring in most-used room and child's bedroom at home visit •Particle reservoirs including installed carpets and/or area rug(s), plush toys, upholstered furnishings •Cleaning practices and appliances | Irritant dust, SVOCs |
Principal exposure assessment methods used in the CHILD study to characterize the physical environment during early childhood.
| Common allergens (includes pets and pests) | X | X | X | ||
| Second-hand smoke | X | X | Urinary cotinine | ||
| Endotoxin | X | ||||
| Dampness | X | X | |||
| Mold | X | X | X | ||
| Semi-volatile compounds | X | X | X | Urinary metabolites of phthalates | |
| Traffic-related air pollution | X | X | X | ||
| Work, take-home exposures | X |
Biological and chemical constituents measured to date in house dust.
| Coarse dust weight | Gravimetric | |
| Fine dust weight | Gravimetric (sieved 150 | |
| Endotoxin | Kinetic chromogenic limulus amebocyte lysate | Chromo-LAL (associates of Cape Cod, East Falmouth, MA, USA) |
| Beta-(1,3)-d-glucan | Kinetic chromogenic factor C-deficient limulus amebocyte lysate | Glucatell (associates of Cape Cod, East Falmouth, MA, USA) |
| Aeroallergens | Standard ELISA or Luminex ELISA | To be determined |
| Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons | Gas chromatograph — mass spectrometry | |
| Hopanes | Gas chromatograph — mass spectrometry | |
| Phthalates | Gas chromatograph — mass spectrometry |
Characteristics of participating households by city in the prenatal period.
| One adult | 18 (2.4) | 17 (2.1) | 14 (1.9) | 37 (3.7) | 86 (2.6) |
| Two adults | 627 (83.7) | 694 (85.9) | 606 (82.8) | 863 (85.4) | 2790 (84.6) |
| Three adults | 68 (9.1) | 51 (6.3) | 53 (7.2) | 60 (5.9) | 232 (7.0) |
| Four or more adults | 36 (4.8) | 46 (5.7) | 59 (8.1) | 50 (5.0) | 191 (5.8) |
| No. of children | 309 (41.5) | 465 (57.5) | 411 (56.1) | 458 (45.4) | 1643 (49.9) |
| One child | 297 (39.9) | 255 (31.6) | 245 (33.5) | 325 (32.2) | 1122 (34.1) |
| Two children | 115 (15.4) | 73 (9.0) | 57 (7.8) | 155 (15.4) | 400 (12.1) |
| Three or more children | 24 (3.2) | 15 (1.9) | 19 (2.6) | 70 (6.9) | 128 (3.9) |
| Pets | 428/749 (57.1) | 320/807 (39.7) | 310/731 (42.4) | 542/1010 (53.7) | 1600/3297 (48.5) |
| Any pests | 254/749 (33.9) | 368/808 (45.5) | 363/731 (49.7) | 407/1009 (40.3) | 1392/3297 (42.2) |
| Rodents | 70/749 (9.3) | 117/808 (14.5) | 89/731 (12.2) | 162/1009 (16.1) | 438/3297 (13.3) |
| Cockroaches | 3/749 (0.4) | 29/808 (3.6) | 10/731 (1.4) | 4/1008 (0.4) | 46/3296 (1.4) |
Note: sample sizes within each center differ for some characteristics owing to differences in missing values, in which case data are presented as n/N (%) where N is the total sample available for that variable in that center.
Characteristics of houses in the prenatal period by city.
| 1939 or earlier | 12 (1.6) | 230 (28.5) | 128 (17.5) | 170 (16.9) | 540 (16.4) |
| 1940–49 | 22 (2.9) | 44 (5.4) | 17 (2.3) | 60 (6.0) | 143 (4.3) |
| 1950–59 | 56 (7.5) | 58 (7.2) | 40 (5.5) | 118 (11.8) | 272 (8.3) |
| 1960–69 | 55 (7.3) | 37 (4.6) | 42 (5.8) | 87 (8.7) | 221 (6.7) |
| 1970–79 | 102 (13.6) | 26 (3.2) | 88 (12.1) | 12a7 (12.7) | 343 (10.4) |
| 1980–89 | 72 (9.6) | 64 (7.9) | 81 (11.1) | 98 (9.8) | 315 (9.6) |
| 1990 or later | 332 (44.3) | 250 (30.9) | 261 (35.8) | 181 (18.0) | 1024 (31.1) |
| Don't know | 98 (13.1) | 99 (12.3) | 72 (9.9) | 162 (16.1) | 431 (13.1) |
| No | 352 (47.5) | 351 (43.5) | 327 (45.0) | 589 (58.4) | 1619 (49.3) |
| Yes | 301 (40.6) | 228 (28.3) | 92 (12.7) | 298 (29.6) | 919 (28.0) |
| Apartment | 88 (11.9) | 227 (28.2) | 308 (42.4) | 121 (12.0) | 744 (22.7) |
| No basement | 103 (14.6) | 229 (30.2) | 419 (61.8) | 156 (16.2) | 907 (29.2) |
| Basement | 603 (85.4) | 530 (69.8) | 259 (38.2) | 807 (83.8) | 2199 (70.8) |
| Basement used as living space (* % of those with basement) | 353 (58.8)* | 285 (54.1)* | 154 (61.6)* | 471 (59.2)* | 1263 (58.1)* |
| Visible signs of mold (* % of those using basement as living space) | 21 (3.5)* | 33 (6.3)* | 16 (6.4)* | 85 (10.6)* | 155 (7.1)* |
| Damp (* % of those using basement as living space) | 126 (20.9)* | 143 (27.0)* | 49 (19.0)* | 213 (26.6)* | 531 (24.2)* |
| Yes | 414 (55.7) | 469 (58.2) | 365 (50.1) | 666 (66.1) | 1914 (58.2) |
| No | 293 (39.4) | 312 (38.7) | 326 (44.7) | 288 (28.6) | 1219 (37.1) |
| Don't know | 36 (4.8) | 25 (3.1) | 38 (5.2) | 54 (5.3) | 153 (4.7) |
| Gas/propane | 639/750 (85.2) | 597/808 (73.9) | 402/732 (54.9) | 635/1013 (62.7) | 2273/3303 (68.8) |
| Oil | 0/750 (0.0) | 6/808 (0.7) | 7/632 (1.0) | 7/1013 (0.7) | 20/3303 (0.6) |
| Electric | 82/750 (10.9) | 123/808 (15.2) | 406/732 (55.5) | 334/1013 (33.0) | 945/3303 (28.6) |
| Wood | 20/750 (2.7) | 4/808 (0.5) | 7/732 (1.0) | 26/1013 (2.6) | 57/3303 (1.7) |
| Other | 18/707 (2.5) | 21/760 (2.8) | 43/680 (6.3) | 31/964 (3.2) | 113/3111 (3.6) |
| Don't know | 41/707 (5.8) | 83/760 (10.9) | 30/680 (4.4) | 51/964 (3.2) | 113/3111 (3.6) |
| Gas fireplace | 236/742 (31.8) | 146/805 (18.1) | 212/731 (29.0) | 91/1000 (9.1) | 685/3278 (20.9) |
| Gas stove or oven for heating | 26/744 (3.5) | 56/805 (7.0) | 47/731 (6.4) | 25/997 (2.5) | 154/3277 (4.7) |
| Gas space heater | 16/744 (2.2) | 20/804 (2.5) | 23/730 (3.2) | 23/1000 (2.3) | 82/3278 (2.5) |
| Gas water heater | 557/749 (74.4) | 492/806 (61.0) | 355/731 (48.6) | 431/1003 (43.0) | 1835/3289 (55.8) |
| Gas stove for cooking | 97/748 (13.0) | 257/808 (31.8) | 214/732 (29.2) | 41/1009 (4.1) | 609/3297 (18.5) |
Note: sample sizes within each center differ for some characteristics owing to differences in missing values, in which case data are presented as n/N (%) where N is the total sample available for that variable in that center.
Cleaning habits and examples of potential chemical exposures in the prenatal period by city.
| 4 or less times | 591 (79.7) | 671 (83.3) | 625 (85.6) | 762 (75.8) | 2649 (80.7) |
| 5–14 times | 116 (15.7) | 111 (13.7) | 91 (12.5) | 197 (19.6) | 515 (15.7) |
| 15 or more times | 34 (4.6) | 24 (3.0) | 14 (1.9) | 46 (4.6) | 118 (3.6) |
| Did not work | 124 (17.5) | 86 (11.3) | 96 (14.1) | 186 (19.4) | 492 (15.8) |
| Mother worked during pregnancy | 583 (82.5) | 674 (88.7) | 583 (85.9) | 775 (80.6) | 2615 (84.2) |
| Mother exposed to dust, fumes or chemicals on skin | 129 (22.1) | 88 (13.1) | 78 (13.4) | 159 (20.5) | 454 (17.4) |
| Fumes, dust or vapor with hobbies | 69/707 (9.8) | 33/760 (4.3) | 48/679 (7.1) | 77/961 (8.0) | 227/3107 (7.3) |
| Liquid or solid air freshener | 235/750 (31.3) | 235/808 (29.1) | 141/731 (19.3) | 346/1009 (34.3) | 957/3298 (29.0) |
| Spray air freshener | 408/750 (54.4) | 373/808 (46.2) | 248/731 (33.9) | 595/1009 (59.0) | 1624/3298 (49.2) |
| Scented candle | 496/750 (66.1) | 405/808 (50.1) | 364/731 (49.8) | 675/1009 (66.9) | 1940/3298 (58.8) |
Note: sample sizes within each center differ for some characteristics owing to differences in missing values, in which case data are presented as n/N (%) where N is the total sample available for that variable in that center.
Figure 2Temporally adjusted (bi-weekly averages) estimates of Land-use Regression (LUR) derived NO2 in the four participating cities (dotted lines represent the mean, the box plots bars show the 25th, median, and 75th percentiles).