Environment International (Dec 2018)

In-utero and childhood chemical exposome in six European mother-child cohorts

  • Line Småstuen Haug,
  • Amrit Kaur Sakhi,
  • Enrique Cequier,
  • Maribel Casas,
  • Léa Maitre,
  • Xavier Basagana,
  • Sandra Andrusaityte,
  • Georgia Chalkiadaki,
  • Leda Chatzi,
  • Muireann Coen,
  • Jeroen de Bont,
  • Audrius Dedele,
  • Joane Ferrand,
  • Regina Grazuleviciene,
  • Juan Ramon Gonzalez,
  • Kristine Bjerve Gutzkow,
  • Hector Keun,
  • Rosie McEachan,
  • Helle Margrete Meltzer,
  • Inga Petraviciene,
  • Oliver Robinson,
  • Pierre-Jean Saulnier,
  • Rémy Slama,
  • Jordi Sunyer,
  • José Urquiza,
  • Marina Vafeiadi,
  • John Wright,
  • Martine Vrijheid,
  • Cathrine Thomsen

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 121
pp. 751 – 763

Abstract

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Background: Harmonized data describing simultaneous exposure to a large number of environmental contaminants in-utero and during childhood is currently very limited. Objectives: To characterize concentrations of a large number of environmental contaminants in pregnant women from Europe and their children, based on chemical analysis of biological samples from mother-child pairs. Methods: We relied on the Early-Life Exposome project, HELIX, a collaborative project across six established population-based birth cohort studies in Europe. In 1301 subjects, biomarkers of exposure to 45 contaminants (i.e. organochlorine compounds, polybrominated diphenyl ethers, per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, toxic and essential elements, phthalate metabolites, environmental phenols, organophosphate pesticide metabolites and cotinine) were measured in biological samples from children (6–12 years) and their mothers during pregnancy, using highly sensitive biomonitoring methods. Results: Most of the exposure biomarkers had high detection frequencies in mothers (35 out of 45 biomarkers with >90% detected) and children (33 out of 45 biomarkers with >90% detected). Concentrations were significantly different between cohorts for all compounds, and were generally higher in maternal compared to children samples. For most of the persistent compounds the correlations between maternal and child concentrations were moderate to high (Spearman Rho > 0.35), while for most non-persistent compounds correlations were considerably lower (Spearman Rho 100,000 concentrations of environmental contaminants in mother-child pairs forms a unique possibility for conducting epidemiological studies using an exposome approach. Keywords: Exposome, Children, Pregnant women, Mother-child pairs, Exposure