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Combined Effects of Prenatal Phthalate Exposure on Cardiometabolic Risk Score Among 4- to 7-year-old Children: MABC Study

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Journal Chemosphere
Date 2022 Nov 7
PMID 36343738
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Abstract

There is currently no consensus about the impact of prenatal phthalate exposure on blood pressure and glycolipids in children. Few studies consider the health effects as an integrated indicator. The combined effect of multiple phthalate exposures is often ignored. Based on the Ma'anshan Birth Cohort, 2298 woman-child pairs were included in this study. Maternal urine was collected in each trimester to analyze 6 phthalate metabolites. The overall cardiometabolic risk (CMR) score was calculated based on serum glycolipids and blood pressure for children aged 4-7 years. A higher score represents a less favorable CMR profile. The restricted cubic spline model was used to explore the relationship between prenatal phthalate exposure and childhood CMR score. In addition, the quantile g-computation and the Bayesian kernel machine regression were used to evaluate the combined effect. The MBP exposure in the 1st trimester (MBP-1st) and the MEP-2nd were non-linearly associated with the CMR score (F = 3.28 and 5.60, P = 0.0378 and 0.0038, respectively). The MBP-3rd (F = 5.31, P = 0.0012) and the ∑LMWP-3rd (F = 4.37, P = 0.0045) were negatively associated with the score in a linear manner. The phthalate mixture in the 2nd trimester increased the score (psil = 0.1747, 95% CI = 0.0077-0.3416), with the MEP being the most common [weights = 0.5290; posterior inclusion probability (PIP) = 0.40]. The phthalate mixture in the 3rd trimester decreased the score (psil = -0.2024, 95% CI = -0.4097-0.0048), with the MEHP (weights = -0.5101; PIP = 0.14) and the MBP (weights = -0.3993, PIP = 1.00) being the greatest contributors. In conclusion, the MBP-1st and the MEP-2nd are non-linearly associated with the cardiometabolic risk in children. The MBP-3rd and the ∑LMWP-3rd decrease the childhood risk. The combined exposure to phthalate mixture in the second and third trimester elevates and decreases the risk of childhood cardiometabolism, respectively.

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