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Short Term Air Pollution Exposure During Pregnancy and Associations with Maternal Immune Markers

Overview
Journal Environ Res
Publisher Elsevier
Date 2024 Jul 21
PMID 39034020
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Affiliations
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Abstract

Background: Air pollution exposure during pregnancy has been associated with numerous adverse pregnancy, birth, and child health outcomes. One proposed mechanism underlying these associations is maternal immune activation and dysregulation. We examined associations between PM and NO exposure during pregnancy and immune markers within immune function groups (TH1, TH2, TH17, Innate/Early Activation, Regulatory, Homeostatic, and Proinflammatory), and examined whether those associations changed across pregnancy.

Methods: In a pregnancy cohort study (n = 290) in Rochester, New York, we measured immune markers (using Luminex) in maternal plasma up to 3 times during pregnancy. We estimated ambient PM and NO concentrations at participants' home addresses using a spatial-temporal model. Using mixed effects models, we estimated changes in immune marker concentrations associated with interquartile range increases in PM (2.88 μg/m) and NO (7.82 ppb) 0-6 days before blood collection, and assessed whether associations were different in early, mid, and late pregnancy.

Results: Increased NO concentrations were associated with higher maternal immune markers, with associations observed across TH1, TH2, TH17, Regulatory, and Homeostatic groups of immune markers. Furthermore, the largest increases in immune markers associated with each 7.82 ppb increase in NO concentration were in late pregnancy (e.g., IL-23 = 0.26 pg/ml, 95% CI = 0.07, 0.46) compared to early pregnancy (e.g., IL-23 = 0.08 pg/ml, 95% CI = -0.11, 0.26).

Conclusions: Results were suggestive of NO-related immune activation. Increases in effect sizes from early to mid to late pregnancy may be due to changes in immune function over the course of pregnancy. These findings provide a basis for immune activation as a mechanism for previously observed associations between air pollution exposure during pregnancy and reduced birthweight, fetal growth restriction, and pregnancy complications.

Citing Articles

Impact of air pollution exposure on cytokines and histone modification profiles at single-cell levels during pregnancy.

Jung Y, Aguilera J, Kaushik A, Ha J, Cansdale S, Yang E Sci Adv. 2024; 10(48):eadp5227.

PMID: 39612334 PMC: 11606498. DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.adp5227.

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