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. 2021 Sep 1:284:117404.
doi: 10.1016/j.envpol.2021.117404. Epub 2021 May 24.

Early life multiple exposures and child cognitive function: A multi-centric birth cohort study in six European countries

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Early life multiple exposures and child cognitive function: A multi-centric birth cohort study in six European countries

Jordi Julvez et al. Environ Pollut. .

Abstract

Epidemiological studies mostly focus on single environmental exposures. This study aims to systematically assess associations between a wide range of prenatal and childhood environmental exposures and cognition. The study sample included data of 1298 mother-child pairs, children were 6-11 years-old, from six European birth cohorts. We measured 87 exposures during pregnancy and 122 cross-sectionally during childhood, including air pollution, built environment, meteorology, natural spaces, traffic, noise, chemicals and life styles. The measured cognitive domains were fluid intelligence (Raven's Coloured Progressive Matrices test, CPM), attention (Attention Network Test, ANT) and working memory (N-Back task). We used two statistical approaches to assess associations between exposure and child cognition: the exposome-wide association study (ExWAS) considering each exposure independently, and the deletion-substitution-addition algorithm (DSA) considering all exposures simultaneously to build a final multiexposure model. Based on this multiexposure model that included the exposure variables selected by ExWAS and DSA models, child organic food intake was associated with higher fluid intelligence (CPM) scores (beta = 1.18; 95% CI = 0.50, 1.87) and higher working memory (N-Back) scores (0.23; 0.05, 0.41), and child fast food intake (-1.25; -2.10, -0.40), house crowding (-0.39; -0.62, -0.16), and child environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) (-0.89; -1.42, -0.35), were all associated with lower CPM scores. Indoor PM2.5 exposure was associated with lower N-Back scores (-0.09; -0.16, -0.02). Additional associations in the unexpected direction were found: Higher prenatal mercury levels, maternal alcohol consumption and child higher perfluorooctane sulfonic acid (PFOS) levels were associated with better cognitive performance; and higher green exposure during pregnancy with lower cognitive performance. This first comprehensive and systematic study of many prenatal and childhood environmental risk factors suggests that unfavourable child nutrition, family crowdedness and child indoor air pollution and ETS exposures adversely and cross-sectionally associate with cognitive function. Unexpected associations were also observed and maybe due to confounding and reverse causality.

Keywords: Birth cohort study; Chemical biomarkers; Environmental epidemiology; Exposome; Neurodevelopment; Neuropsychological development.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.

Figures

Image 1
Prenatal and childhood exposome-wide associations with child fluid intelligence (CPM). The exposures selected by Deletion-substitution-addition algorithm are represented by a triangle. Child fluid intelligence is mainly associated with childhood exposome, fast-food (negative association, left sided) and organic food consumption (positive, right sided), house crowding (negative, left sided), and child environmental tobacco smoke (ETS, negative, left sided).
Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Exposome-wide associations with child cognitive functions (single-exposure models). On the left panel are the results as volcano plots for the prenatal exposome and the right panel the cross-sectional childhood exposome. The horizontal line across the plots represents the multiple testing threshold correction (based on effective number of tests). Any exposures above this line are considered significant. All the exposures with a p-value below 0.05 are labelled.

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