Literature DB >> 28736150

Prenatal environmental chemical exposures and longitudinal patterns of child neurobehavior.

Joseph M Braun1, Kimberly Yolton2, Shaina L Stacy3, Bahar Erar4, George D Papandonatos4, David C Bellinger5, Bruce P Lanphear6, Aimin Chen7.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Prenatal chemical exposures may adversely affect neurodevelopment, but few studies have examined the persistence of these associations. We examined whether associations between prenatal bisphenol A (BPA) or polybrominated diphenyl ether (PBDE) exposures persist or resolve as children age.
METHODS: We followed 346 mother-child pairs (enrolled 2003-2006) from Cincinnati, OH from pregnancy until children were 8 years old. We measured BPA in urine collected at 16 and 26 weeks gestation and PBDE-47 in serum collected at 16 weeks gestation. We administered repeated measures of children's behavior, mental/psychomotor development, and IQ from ages 1-8 years. We determined if associations of BPA or PBDE-47 with child neurobehavior persisted or resolved as children aged using linear mixed models and estimated neurobehavioral measure reproducibility using intraclass correlation coefficients (ICCs).
RESULTS: Higher BPA in girls and higher PBDE-47 in both boys and girls were associated with more externalizing behaviors; these associations persisted from ages 2-8 years (exposure×age interaction p-values≥0.36). Higher PBDE-47 concentrations were associated with decreases in MDI from ages 1-3 years (PBDE-47x age interaction p-value=0.03) and persistently lower IQ at ages 5 and 8 years (PBDE-47×age interaction p-value=0.56). Mental/psychomotor abilities had fair reproducibility from ages 1-3 years (ICCs∼0.4), cognitive abilities from ages 5 to 8 years had excellent reproducibility (ICCs=0.7-0.8), and parent-reported behaviors from ages 2-8 years had poor to good reproducibility (ICCs=0.38-0.59).
CONCLUSIONS: Prenatal BPA and PBDE-47 concentrations were persistently associated with more externalizing behaviors. PBDE-47 concentrations were inversely associated with cognitive abilities that strengthened over time.
Copyright © 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Bisphenol A; Children; Epidemiology; Halogenated flame retardants; Neurodevelopment; Prenatal

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28736150      PMCID: PMC5623631          DOI: 10.1016/j.neuro.2017.07.027

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neurotoxicology        ISSN: 0161-813X            Impact factor:   4.294


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