弗吉尼亚州未受管制的饮用水污染物与不良出生结果

Holly A. Young, Korine N. Kolivras, L. H. Krometis, C. Marcillo, J. Gohlke
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引用次数: 0

摘要

通过《未受管制的污染物监测规则》(UCMR),美国环保署对选定的可能引起关注的未受管制的饮用水污染物进行监测。虽然对 UCMR 中列出的污染物进行了监测,但这些污染物并没有相关的健康标准,因此在检测到污染物后无需采取任何行动。鉴于对发病率的认识在不断发展,且缺乏数值标准,以往对饮用水健康影响的研究通常只评估受管制污染物的影响。很少有研究探讨未受管制的污染物与胎儿健康之间的关联。本研究单独评估了弗吉尼亚州在 2008-2010 年和 2013-2015 年监测期间分别监测到的 UCMR 2 和 UCMR 3 监测到的饮用水污染物是否与胎儿健康结果有关,包括低出生体重 (LBW)、足月低出生体重 (tLBW) 和早产 (PTB)。弗吉尼亚州在 UCMR 2 和 UCMR 3 期间出生的单胎婴儿(n = 435,449 例)被分配到相应的估计供水服务区(n = 435,449 例)。污染物发生率数据来自国家污染物发生率数据库(National Contaminant Occurrence Database),其暴露定义为估计服务区水平,以限制暴露误分类。每个出生结果的逻辑回归模型评估了与未受管制的饮用水污染物的潜在关联。在 UCMR 2 中,N-亚硝基二甲胺与 PTB 呈正相关(OR = 1.08;95% CI:1.02,1.14,P = 0.01)。UCMR 3 监测的钼(OR = 0.92;95% CI:0.87,0.97,P = 0.0)和钒(OR = 0.96;95% CI:0.92,1.00,P = 0.04)与低体重儿呈负相关。钼也与终生低体重呈负相关(OR = 0.90;95% CI:0.82,0.99,P = 0.03),但氯二氟甲烷(HCFC-22)与终生低体重呈正相关(OR 1.18;95% CI:1.01,1.37,P = 0.03)。这些研究结果表明,未受监管的饮用水污染物可能会对胎儿健康构成风险,并表明在考虑全国范围内的饮用水监管决定时,有可能将现有健康数据与监测数据联系起来。
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Unregulated drinking water contaminants and adverse birth outcomes in Virginia
Through the Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring Rule (UCMR), the Environmental Protection Agency monitors selected unregulated drinking water contaminants of potential concern. While contaminants listed in the UCMR are monitored, they do not have associated health-based standards, so no action is required following detection. Given evolving understanding of incidence and the lack of numeric standards, previous examinations of health implications of drinking water generally only assess impacts of regulated contaminants. Little research has examined associations between unregulated contaminants and fetal health. This study individually assesses whether drinking water contaminants monitored under UCMR 2 and, with a separate analysis, UCMR 3, which occurred during the monitoring years 2008–2010 and 2013–2015 respectively, are associated with fetal health outcomes, including low birth weight (LBW), term-low birth weight (tLBW), and preterm birth (PTB) in Virginia. Singleton births (n = 435,449) that occurred in Virginia during UCMR 2 and UCMR 3 were assigned to corresponding estimated water service areas (n = 435,449). Contaminant occurrence data were acquired from the National Contaminant Occurrence Database, with exposure defined at the estimated service area level to limit exposure misclassification. Logistic regression models for each birth outcome assessed potential associations with unregulated drinking water contaminants. Within UCMR 2, N-Nitroso-dimethylamine was positively associated with PTB (OR = 1.08; 95% CI: 1.02, 1.14, P = 0.01). Molybdenum (OR = 0.92; 95% CI: 0.87, 0.97, P = 0.0) and vanadium (OR = 0.96; 95% CI: 0.92, 1.00, P = 0.04), monitored under UCMR 3, were negatively associated with LBW. Molybdenum was also negatively associated (OR = 0.90; 95% CI: 0.82, 0.99, P = 0.03) with tLBW, though chlorodifluoromethane (HCFC-22) was positively associated (OR 1.18; 95% CI: 1.01, 1.37, P = 0.03) with tLBW. These findings indicate that unregulated drinking water contaminants may pose risks to fetal health and demonstrate the potential to link existing health data with monitoring data when considering drinking water regulatory determinations at the national scale.
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