» Articles » PMID: 32595237

A Spatially Varying Distributed Lag Model with Application to an Air Pollution and Term Low Birth Weight Study

Overview
Specialty Public Health
Date 2020 Jun 30
PMID 32595237
Citations 6
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Distributed lag models have been used to identify critical pregnancy periods of exposure (i.e. critical exposure windows) to air pollution in studies of pregnancy outcomes. However, much of the previous work in this area has ignored the possibility of spatial variability in the lagged health effect parameters that may result from exposure characteristics and/or residual confounding. We develop a spatially varying Gaussian process model for critical windows called 'SpGPCW' and use it to investigate geographic variability in the association between term low birth weight and average weekly concentrations of ozone and PM during pregnancy by using birth records from North Carolina. SpGPCW is designed to accommodate areal level spatial correlation between lagged health effect parameters and temporal smoothness in risk estimation across pregnancy. Through simulation and a real data application, we show that the consequences of ignoring spatial variability in the lagged health effect parameters include less reliable inference for the parameters and diminished ability to identify true critical window sets, and we investigate the use of existing Bayesian model comparison techniques as tools for determining the presence of spatial variability. We find that exposure to PM is associated with elevated term low birth weight risk in selected weeks and counties and that ignoring spatial variability results in null associations during these periods. An R package (SpGPCW) has been developed to implement the new method.

Citing Articles

Heterogeneous Distributed Lag Models to Estimate Personalized Effects of Maternal Exposures to Air Pollution.

Mork D, Kioumourtzoglou M, Weisskopf M, Coull B, Wilson A J Am Stat Assoc. 2024; 119(545):14-26.

PMID: 38835505 PMC: 11147136. DOI: 10.1080/01621459.2023.2258595.


The association of short-term increases in ambient PM2.5 and temperature exposures with stillbirth: racial/ethnic disparities among Medicaid recipients.

Shupler M, Huybrechts K, Leung M, Wei Y, Schwartz J, Hernandez-Diaz S Am J Epidemiol. 2024; 193(10):1372-1383.

PMID: 38770979 PMC: 11458190. DOI: 10.1093/aje/kwae083.


An Approach to Identifying Spatial Variability in Observed Infectious Disease Spread in a Prospective Time-Space Series with Applications to COVID-19 and Dengue Incidence.

Wu C, Chen C, Wang S, Shete S Res Sq. 2024; .

PMID: 38343818 PMC: 10854290. DOI: 10.21203/rs.3.rs-3859620/v1.


CRITICAL WINDOW VARIABLE SELECTION FOR MIXTURES: ESTIMATING THE IMPACT OF MULTIPLE AIR POLLUTANTS ON STILLBIRTH.

Warren J, Chang H, Warren L, Strickland M, Darrow L, Mulholland J Ann Appl Stat. 2023; 16(3):1633-1652.

PMID: 36686219 PMC: 9854390. DOI: 10.1214/21-aoas1560.


Multiple exposure distributed lag models with variable selection.

Antonelli J, Wilson A, Coull B Biostatistics. 2022; 25(1):1-19.

PMID: 36073640 PMC: 10724118. DOI: 10.1093/biostatistics/kxac038.


References
1.
Warren J, Son J, Pereira G, Leaderer B, Bell M . Investigating the Impact of Maternal Residential Mobility on Identifying Critical Windows of Susceptibility to Ambient Air Pollution During Pregnancy. Am J Epidemiol. 2017; 187(5):992-1000. PMC: 5928458. DOI: 10.1093/aje/kwx335. View

2.
Wilson A, Chiu Y, Hsu H, Wright R, Wright R, Coull B . Bayesian distributed lag interaction models to identify perinatal windows of vulnerability in children's health. Biostatistics. 2017; 18(3):537-552. PMC: 5862289. DOI: 10.1093/biostatistics/kxx002. View

3.
Heaton M, Peng R . Extending distributed lag models to higher degrees. Biostatistics. 2013; 15(2):398-412. PMC: 3944968. DOI: 10.1093/biostatistics/kxt031. View

4.
Schwartz J . The distributed lag between air pollution and daily deaths. Epidemiology. 2000; 11(3):320-6. DOI: 10.1097/00001648-200005000-00016. View

5.
Bello G, Arora M, Austin C, Horton M, Wright R, Gennings C . Extending the Distributed Lag Model framework to handle chemical mixtures. Environ Res. 2017; 156:253-264. PMC: 5657400. DOI: 10.1016/j.envres.2017.03.031. View