| Literature DB >> 34873215 |
Dirga Kumar Lamichhane1, Dal-Young Jung1, Yee-Jin Shin2, Kyung-Sook Lee3, So-Yeon Lee4, Kangmo Ahn5,6, Kyung Won Kim7, Youn Ho Shin8, Dong In Suh9, Soo-Jong Hong10, Hwan-Cheol Kim11.
Abstract
Air pollution may influence prenatal maternal stress, but research evidence is scarce. Using data from a prospective cohort study conducted on pregnant women (n = 2153), we explored the association between air pollution and perceived stress, which was assessed using the 14-item Perceived Stress Scale (PSS), among pregnant women. Average exposures to particulate matter with an aerodynamic diameter of < 2.5 µm (PM2.5) or < 10 µm (PM10), nitrogen dioxide (NO2), and ozone (O3) for each trimester and the entire pregnancy were estimated at maternal residential addresses using land-use regression models. Linear regression models were applied to estimate associations between PSS scores and exposures to each air pollutant. After adjustment for potential confounders, interquartile-range (IQR) increases in whole pregnancy exposures to PM2.5, PM10, and O3 in the third trimester were associated with 0.37 (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.01, 0.74), 0.54 (95% CI 0.11, 0.97), and 0.30 (95% CI 0.07, 0.54) point increases in prenatal PSS scores, respectively. Furthermore, these associations were more evident in women with child-bearing age and a lower level of education. Also, the association between PSS scores and PM10 was stronger in the spring. Our findings support the relationship between air pollution and prenatal maternal stress.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34873215 PMCID: PMC8648786 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-02845-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Characteristics of participants. BMI body mass index, PSS perceived stress scale, SD standard deviation. n = 2153.
| Characteristics | Mean ± SD or n (%) |
|---|---|
| Age (years) | 33.1 ± 3.6 |
| < 25 | 7 (0.3) |
| 25–29 | 324 (15.1) |
| 30–34 | 1121 (52.0) |
| 35–39 | 604 (28.1) |
| ≥ 40 | 97 (4.5) |
| < 25 | 2012 (93.5) |
| ≥ 25 | 141 (6.5) |
| Nulliparous | 1314 (61.0) |
| Parous | 661 (30.7) |
| Missing | 178 (8.3) |
| Never | 1988 (92.3) |
| Ever | 165 (7.7) |
| No | 1989 (92.4) |
| Yes | 164 (7.6) |
| No | 724 (33.6) |
| Yes | 1429 (66.4) |
| Secondary school | 99 (4.6) |
| College or university | 1579 (73.3) |
| Graduate school | 475 (22.1) |
| Gestational age (weeks) | 39.3 ± 1.1 |
| High (≥ 4 million per month) | 1353 (62.8) |
| Low (< 4 million per month) | 800 (37.2) |
| No | 2081 (96.7) |
| Yes | 72 (3.3) |
| No | 2011 (93.4) |
| Yes | 142 (6.6) |
| No | 2123 (98.6) |
| Yes | 30 (1.4) |
| No | 2084 (96.8) |
| Yes | 69 (3.2) |
| No | 2121 (98.5) |
| Yes | 32 (1.5) |
| Spring | 465 (21.6) |
| Summer | 432 (20.1) |
| Autumn | 489 (22.7) |
| Winter | 590 (27.4) |
| Missing | 177 (8.2) |
| PSS score | 20.2 ± 7.2 |
Distributions of maternal air pollution exposure levels for different pregnancy periods. SD standard deviation, ppb parts per billion.
| Air pollutants | Mean ± SD | Min | 25th | 50th | 75th | Max |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1st trimester | 27.64 ± 8.13 | 11.41 | 21.17 | 27.27 | 32.85 | 57.46 |
| 2nd trimester | 26.68 ± 7.68 | 12.18 | 20.53 | 25.96 | 31.52 | 61.99 |
| 3rd trimester | 27.37 ± 7.88 | 11.71 | 21.24 | 26.77 | 32.30 | 57.86 |
| Whole pregnancy | 27.19 ± 5.67 | 14.83 | 23.21 | 26.05 | 30.09 | 53.73 |
| 1st trimester | 51.17 ± 12.40 | 24.25 | 40.95 | 51.77 | 61.23 | 88.82 |
| 2nd trimester | 49.40 ± 11.59 | 25.73 | 39.31 | 49.09 | 58.58 | 81.48 |
| 3rd trimester | 50.70 ± 12.04 | 24.48 | 40.78 | 51.19 | 59.91 | 85.67 |
| Whole pregnancy | 50.36 ± 6.47 | 34.60 | 45.80 | 50.17 | 54.66 | 73.93 |
| 1st trimester | 35.04 ± 9.65 | 2.00 | 29.00 | 35.00 | 41.00 | 76.00 |
| 2nd trimester | 34.57 ± 9.14 | 2.00 | 29.00 | 34.00 | 40.00 | 84.00 |
| 3rd trimester | 35.30 ± 9.36 | 3.00 | 29.00 | 35.00 | 41.00 | 81.00 |
| Whole pregnancy | 34.94 ± 7.97 | 2.00 | 30.00 | 35.00 | 39.00 | 75.00 |
| 1st trimester | 44.52 ± 15.09 | 5.00 | 31.00 | 44.00 | 57.00 | 88.00 |
| 2nd trimester | 43.45 ± 14.50 | 9.00 | 31.00 | 42.00 | 55.00 | 83.00 |
| 3rd trimester | 41.49 ± 15.00 | 8.00 | 28.00 | 40.00 | 53.00 | 85.00 |
| Whole pregnancy | 43.22 ± 7.88 | 9.00 | 38.00 | 43.00 | 49.00 | 69.00 |
Associations between air pollution exposure (per IQR increase) and PSS scores among pregnant women in single-pollutant models. CI confidence interval, IQR interquartile range, ppb parts per billion, PPS perceived stress scale.
| Air pollutants | Trimester | Model 1a | Model 2b | Model 3c | Model 4d |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| β (95% CI) | β (95% CI) | β (95% CI) | β (95% CI) | ||
| PM2.5 (IQR: 6.88 µg/m3) | First | 0.11 (− 0.15, 0.37) | 0.13 (− 0.12, 0.39) | 0.27 (− 0.01, 0.54)+ | 0.29 (0.01, 0.57)* |
| Second | 0.25 (− 0.02, 0.53)+ | 0.29 (0.02, 0.56)* | 0.32 (0.03, 0.61)* | 0.36 (0.06, 0.65)* | |
| Third | 0.04 (− 0.23, 0.30) | 0.04 (− 0.22, 0.31) | − 0.04 (− 0.31, 0.24) | − 0.03 (− 0.31, 0.24) | |
| Pregnancy | 0.28 (− 0.09, 0.64) | 0.32 (− 0.05, 0.69)+ | 0.32 (− 0.05, 0.68)+ | 0.37 (0.01, 0.74)* | |
| PM10 (IQR: 8.86 µg/m3) | First | 0.12 (− 0.10, 0.34) | 0.14 (− 0.08, 0.35) | 0.26 (0.02, 0.51)* | 0.29 (0.05, 0.53)* |
| Second | 0.25 (0.01, 0.48)* | 0.28 (0.05, 0.51)* | 0.31 (0.04, 0.59)* | 0.36 (0.08, 0.63)* | |
| Third | 0.01 (− 0.21, 0.24) | 0.01 (− 0.21, 0.24) | − 0.11 (− 0.35, 0.13) | − 0.11 (− 0.35, 0.14) | |
| Pregnancy | 0.47 (0.05, 0.88)* | 0.53 (0.11, 0.94)* | 0.47 (0.04, 0.90)* | 0.54 (0.11, 0.97)* | |
| NO2 (IQR: 9.0 ppb) | First | − 0.01 (− 0.30, 0.27) | 0.06 (− 0.22, 0.35) | 0.17 (− 0.11, 0.45) | 0.18 (− 0.10, 0.46) |
| Second | 0.02 (− 0.28, 0.32) | 0.12 (− 0.18, 0.42) | 0.13 (− 0.18, 0.45) | 0.13 (− 0.19, 0.45) | |
| Third | − 0.24 (− 0.53, 0.05) | − 0.17 (− 0.46, 0.12) | − 0.15 (− 0.43, 0.14) | − 0.16 (− 0.45, 0.12) | |
| Pregnancy | − 0.10 (− 0.44, 0.25) | 0.01 (− 0.33, 0.36) | 0.07 (− 0.27, 0.41) | 0.07 (− 0.27, 0.41) | |
| O3 (IQR: 11.0 ppb) | First | − 0.10 (− 0.33, 0.12) | − 0.13 (− 0.35, 0.09) | − 0.13 (− 0.36, 0.09) | − 0.15 (− 0.38, 0.08) |
| Second | 0.04 (− 0.19, 0.27) | − 0.01 (− 0.22, 0.24) | 0.18 (− 0.11, 0.47) | 0.19 (− 0.10, 0.48) | |
| Third | 0.30 (0.07, 0.52)** | 0.30 (0.08, 0.52)** | 0.30 (0.06, 0.54)* | 0.30 (0.07, 0.54)* | |
| Pregnancy | 0.25 (− 0.18, 0.67) | 0.18 (− 0.24, 0.61) | 0.32 (− 0.14, 0.78) | 0.32 (− 0.14, 0.77) |
+p-value < 0.1. *p-value < 0.05. **p-value < 0.01.
aModel 1: unadjusted.
bModel 2: Model 1 + maternal age, education, occupation, and income.
cModel 3: Model 2 + gestational age, maternal smoking, drinking during pregnancy, parity, pre-pregnancy BMI, and season at delivery.
dModel 4: Model 3 + asthma, thyroid disease, malignant tumors, liver disease, and hypertension or diabetes.
Figure 1Nonlinear effects of PM2.5 (a), PM10 (b), NO2, (c) and O3 (d) on PSS scores. Point estimates (solid line) and 95% confidence intervals (long dashed lines) were obtained by restricted cubic splines with three knots at the 10th, 50th, and 90th percentiles of PM2.5, PM10, and NO2 distributions and four knots at the 5th, 35th, 65th, and 95th percentiles of the O3 distribution. PM2.5 and PM10 during the second trimester, NO2 during the first trimester, and O3 during the third trimester were used for spline analyses. Reference PM2.5, PM10, NO2, and O3 values for these plots with β fixed at 0.0 were 22.4 μg/m3, 43.9 μg/m3, 39.0 parts per billion (ppb), and 31.0 ppb, respectively. Models adjusted for maternal age, education, occupation, gestational age, maternal smoking, drinking during pregnancy, parity, pre-pregnancy BMI, season at delivery, income, asthma, thyroid disease, malignant tumors, liver disease, and hypertension or diabetes. Histograms show the distributions of PM2.5 (a), PM10 (b), NO2 (c), and O3 (d) exposures.
Figure 2Adjusted differences in PSS scores per IQR increase in air pollutants stratified by season. Analyses were adjusted for maternal age, education, smoking, occupation, drinking during pregnancy, parity, pre-pregnancy BMI, gestational age, income, asthma, thyroid disease, malignant tumors, liver diseases, and hypertension or diabetes. +p for interaction < 0.1. *p for interaction < 0.05. **p for interaction < 0.01.
Multi-pollutant model of associations between exposure to air pollutants (per IQR increase) and PSS scores among pregnant women.
| Trimester | + PM10 | + NO2 | + O3 | + PM10 + NO2 + O3 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| β (95% CI)a | β (95% CI)a | β (95% CI)a | β (95% CI)a | |
| PM10 | – | 0.29 (0.001, 0.58)* | 0.28 (− 0.001, 0.56)+ | 0.28 (− 0.02, 0.59)+ |
| NO2 | − 0.01 (− 0.34, 0.33) | – | 0.11 (− 0.23, 0.45) | − 0.02 (− 0.38, 0.34) |
| O3 | − 0.02 (− 0.28,0.24) | − 0.10 (− 0.37, 0.18) | – | − 0.03 (− 0.31, 0.26) |
| PM10 | – | 0.36 (0.07, 0.65)* | 0.34 (0.06, 0.61)* | 0.31 (0.01, 0.62)* |
| NO2 | − 0.01 (− 0.35, 0.33) | – | 0.23 (− 0.11, 0.57) | 0.07 (− 0.31, 0.45) |
| O3 | 0.13 (− 0.16, 0.43) | 0.26 (− 0.05, 0.58)+ | – | 0.16 (− 0.17, 0.49) |
| PM10 | – | − 0.05 (− 0.33, 0.23) | 0.06 (− 0.22, 0.33) | 0.05 (− 0.25, 0.34) |
| NO2 | − 0.14 (− 0.47, 0.19) | – | 0.06 (− 0.28, 0.41) | 0.04 (− 0.32, 0.41) |
| O3 | 0.33 (0.06, 0.60)* | 0.33 (0.04, 0.62)* | – | 0.35 (0.04, 0.65)* |
| PM10 | – | 0.56 (0.11, 1.01)* | 0.54 (0.11, 0.97)* | 0.52 (0.07, 0.98)* |
| NO2 | − 0.07 (− 0.42, 0.29) | – | 0.21 (− 0.17, 0.59) | 0.06 (− 0.34, 0.46) |
| O3 | 0.33 (− 0.13, 0.78) | 0.44 (− 0.07, 0.95)+ | – | 0.36 (− 0.15, 0.88) |
+p-value < 0.1. *p-value < 0.05.
aMulti-pollutant model was further adjusted for the effects of other air pollutants in the same time window using the adjusted single-pollutant model 4 shown in Table 3.