Literature DB >> 36191488

Biomarkers of maternal lead exposure during pregnancy using micro-spatial child deciduous dentine measurements.

Lucia Gerbi1, Christine Austin1, Nicolo Foppa Pedretti1, Nia McRae1, Chitra J Amarasiriwardena1, Adriana Mercado-García2, Libni A Torres-Olascoaga2, Martha M Tellez-Rojo3, Robert O Wright1, Manish Arora1, Colicino Elena4.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Lead is a toxic chemical of public health concern, however limited biomarkers are able to reconstruct prior lead exposures in early-life when biospecimens are not collected and stored. Although child tooth dentine measurements accurately assess past child perinatal lead exposure, it has not been established if they reflect maternal exposure in pregnancy. AIM: To assess the prenatal relationship between child tooth dentine and maternal blood lead measurements and to estimate maternal lead exposure during the 2nd and 3rd trimesters of pregnancy from weekly child dentine profiles.
METHODS: We measured early-life lead exposure in child tooth dentine and maternal blood from 419 child-mother dyads enrolled in the Programming Research in Obesity, Growth, Environment and Social Stress (PROGRESS) cohort. We employed the Super-Learner algorithm to determine the relationship of dentine lead data with maternal blood lead concentrations and to predict maternal lead from child dentine lead data in blinded analyses. We validated and quantified the bias of our results internally.
RESULTS: Mothers had moderate blood lead levels (trimesters: 2nd = 29.45 ug/L, 3rd = 31.78 ug/L). Trimester-averaged and weekly child dentine lead measurements were highly correlated with maternal blood levels in the corresponding trimesters. The predicted trimester-specific maternal lead levels were significantly correlated with actual measured blood values (trimesters: 2nd = 0.83; 3rd = 0.88). Biomarkers of maternal lead exposure discriminated women highly exposed to lead (>mean) with 85 % and 96 % specificity in the 2nd and 3rd trimesters, respectively, with 80 % sensitivity. DISCUSSION: Weekly child dentine lead levels can serve as biomarkers of past child and maternal lead exposures during pregnancy.
Copyright © 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Blood lead levels; Machine learning; Pregnancy; Prenatal lead exposure; Super-Learner algorithm; Tooth dentine lead levels

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2022        PMID: 36191488      PMCID: PMC9576006          DOI: 10.1016/j.envint.2022.107529

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Environ Int        ISSN: 0160-4120            Impact factor:   13.352


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