Prenatal exposure to air pollution and maternal and fetal thyroid function: a systematic review of the epidemiological evidence.

IF 5.3 2区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES Environmental Health Pub Date : 2024-09-27 DOI:10.1186/s12940-024-01116-9
Catherine O'Donnell, Erin J Campbell, Sabrina McCormick, Susan C Anenberg
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Abstract

Background: Exposure to ambient air pollution is a top risk factor contributing to the global burden of disease. Pregnant persons and their developing fetuses are particularly susceptible to adverse health outcomes associated with air pollution exposures. During pregnancy, the thyroid plays a critical role in fetal development, producing thyroid hormones that are associated with brain development. Our objective is to systematically review recent literature that investigates how prenatal exposure to air pollution affects maternal and fetal thyroid function.

Methods: Following the Navigation Guide Framework, we systematically reviewed peer-reviewed journal articles that examined prenatal exposures to air pollution and outcomes related to maternal and fetal thyroid function, evaluated the risk of bias for individual studies, and synthesized the overall quality and strength of the evidence.

Results: We found 19 studies that collected data on pregnancy exposure windows spanning preconception to full term from 1999 to 2020 across nine countries. Exposure to fine particulate matter (PM2.5) was most frequently and significantly positively associated with fetal/neonatal thyroid hormone concentrations, and inversely associated with maternal thyroid hormone concentrations. To a lesser extent, traffic-related air pollutants, such as nitrogen dioxide (NO2) had significant effects on fetal/neonatal thyroid function but no significant effects on maternal thyroid function. However, the body of literature is challenged by risk of bias in exposure assessment methods and in the evaluation of confounding variables, and there is an inconsistency amongst effect estimates. Thus, using the definitions provided by the objective Navigation Guide Framework, we have concluded that there is limited, low quality evidence pertaining to the effects of prenatal air pollution exposure on maternal and fetal thyroid function.

Conclusion: To improve the quality of the body of evidence, future research should seek to enhance exposure assessment methods by integrating personal monitoring and high-quality exposure data (e.g., using spatiotemporally resolved satellite observations and statistical modeling) and outcome assessment methods by measuring a range of thyroid hormones throughout the course of pregnancy.

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产前暴露于空气污染与母体和胎儿甲状腺功能:流行病学证据的系统回顾。
背景:暴露于环境空气污染是造成全球疾病负担的首要风险因素。孕妇及其发育中的胎儿尤其容易受到与空气污染暴露相关的不良健康后果的影响。在怀孕期间,甲状腺在胎儿发育中起着至关重要的作用,它产生的甲状腺激素与大脑发育有关。我们的目的是系统地回顾近期研究产前暴露于空气污染如何影响母体和胎儿甲状腺功能的文献:按照《导航指南框架》,我们系统地回顾了同行评议的期刊文章,这些文章研究了产前暴露于空气污染以及与母体和胎儿甲状腺功能相关的结果,评估了单项研究的偏倚风险,并综合了证据的整体质量和强度:我们找到了 19 项研究,这些研究收集了 9 个国家从 1999 年到 2020 年从孕前到足月期间妊娠暴露窗口的数据。细颗粒物(PM2.5)暴露与胎儿/新生儿甲状腺激素浓度呈显著正相关,与孕产妇甲状腺激素浓度呈反相关。交通相关空气污染物(如二氧化氮)对胎儿/新生儿甲状腺功能的影响较小,但对母体甲状腺功能无明显影响。然而,这些文献在暴露评估方法和混杂变量评估方面存在偏差风险,而且效果估计值也不一致。因此,根据客观导航指南框架提供的定义,我们得出结论:产前空气污染暴露对母体和胎儿甲状腺功能影响的证据有限且质量不高:为了提高证据的质量,未来的研究应通过整合个人监测和高质量的暴露数据(如使用时空分辨卫星观测和统计建模)来加强暴露评估方法,并通过在整个孕期测量一系列甲状腺激素来加强结果评估方法。
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来源期刊
Environmental Health
Environmental Health 环境科学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
10.10
自引率
1.70%
发文量
115
审稿时长
3.0 months
期刊介绍: Environmental Health publishes manuscripts on all aspects of environmental and occupational medicine and related studies in toxicology and epidemiology. Environmental Health is aimed at scientists and practitioners in all areas of environmental science where human health and well-being are involved, either directly or indirectly. Environmental Health is a public health journal serving the public health community and scientists working on matters of public health interest and importance pertaining to the environment.
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