Joint Effects of Indoor Air Pollution and Maternal Psychosocial Factors During Pregnancy on Trajectories of Early Childhood Psychopathology.

Journal: American journal of epidemiology

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Affiliated Institutions:  Department of Epidemiology, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University, Atlanta, GA, USA. Department of Paediatrics and Child Health, Red Cross War Memorial Children's Hospital, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa. Neuroscience Institute, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa. Gangarosa Department of Environmental Health, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University, Atlanta, GA, USA.

Abstract summary 

Prenatal indoor air pollution and maternal psychosocial factors have been associated with adverse psychopathology. We used environmental exposure mixture methodology to investigate joint effects of both exposure classes on child behavior trajectories.For 360 children from the South African Drakenstein Child Health Study, we created trajectories of Child Behavior Checklist scores (24, 42, 60 months) using latent class linear mixed effects models. Indoor air pollutants and psychosocial factors were measured during pregnancy (2nd trimester). After adjusting for confounding, single-exposure effects (per natural log-1 unit increase) were assessed using polytomous logistic regression models; joint effects using self-organizing maps (SOM), and principal component (PC) analysis.Three trajectories were chosen for both internalizing and externalizing problems, with "high" (externalizing) or "increasing" (internalizing) being the most adverse trajectories. High externalizing trajectory was associated with increased particulate matter (PM10) exposure (OR [95%-CI]: 1.25 [1.01,1.55]) and SOM exposure profile most associated with smoking (2.67 [1.14,6.27]). Medium internalizing trajectory was associated with increased emotional intimate partner violence (2.66 [1.17,5.57]), increasing trajectory with increased benzene (1.24 [1.02,1.51]) and toluene (1.21 [1.02,1.44]) and the PC most correlated with benzene and toluene (1.25 [1.02, 1.54]).Prenatal exposure to environmental pollutants and psychosocial factors was associated with internalizing and externalizing child behavior trajectories. Understanding joint effects of adverse exposure mixtures will facilitate targeted interventions to prevent childhood psychopathology.

Authors & Co-authors:  Christensen Grace M GM Marcus Michele M Vanker Aneesa A Eick Stephanie M SM Malcolm-Smith Susan S Suglia Shakira F SF Chang Howard H HH Zar Heather J HJ Stein Dan J DJ Hüls Anke A

Study Outcome 

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Citations : 
Authors :  10
Identifiers
Doi : kwae046
SSN : 1476-6256
Study Population
Female
Mesh Terms
Other Terms
air pollution;mixtures;psychopathology;psychosocial factors
Study Design
Study Approach
Mixed Methods
Country of Study
South Africa
Publication Country
United States