Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety (Jan 2021)

Associations between prenatal and postnatal lead exposure and preschool children humoral and cellular immune responses

  • Meng Wang,
  • Wei Xia,
  • Qiang Zeng,
  • Wenxin Zhang,
  • Xi Qian,
  • Shuangshuang Bao,
  • Aifen Zhou,
  • Yuanyuan Li,
  • Shunqing Xu

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 207
p. 111536

Abstract

Read online

Studies have shown that lead exposure affected the immune function, but few studies have examined the relationships between in utero lead exposure, a sensitive period that is important for immune development, and later immune responses. To investigate the effects of prenatal and childhood lead exposure on the preschool-aged children’s immune responses, a prospective birth cohort study was established in Wuhan, China, in which lead concentrations were analyzed in maternal urine during the third trimester and in plasma samples from children aged about 3 years. We assessed immune responses by measuring immune cytokines in the children's plasma (n = 326) and peripheral blood T lymphocyte subsets (n = 394) at 3 years of age. Each unit increase in maternal urinary lead concentration (μg/g creatinine) was associated with reduced IL-10 (β = −5.93%, 95%CI: −11.82%, −0.03%) and reduced IL-4 levels (β = −5.62%, 95%CI: −10.44%, −0.80%). Lead in children’s plasma (μg/L) was associated with significant increase in TNF-α (β = 10.78%, 95%CI: 3.97%, 17.59%). No statistically significant relationship of childhood lead exposure with T lymphocyte subsets was observed. The study suggested prenatal and childhood lead exposure was associated with changes in preschool children’s plasma cytokine levels.

Keywords