Traffic-related air toxics and preterm birth: a population-based case-control study in Los Angeles county, California
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Background
Numerous studies have associated air pollutant exposures with adverse birth outcomes, but there is still relatively little information to attribute effects to specific emission sources or air toxics. We used three exposure data sources to examine risks of preterm birth in Los Angeles women when exposed to high levels of traffic-related air pollutants – including specific toxics – during pregnancy.
Results
Odds of preterm birth increased 6-21% per inter-quartile range increase in entire pregnancy exposures to organic carbon (OC), elemental carbon (EC), benzene, and diesel, biomass burning and ammonium nitrate PM2.5, and 30% per inter-quartile increase in PAHs; these pollutants were positively correlated and clustered together in a factor analysis. Associations with LUR exposure metrics were weaker (3-4% per inter-quartile range increase).
Conclusions
These latest analyses provide additional evidence of traffic-related air pollution’s impact on preterm birth for women living in Southern California and indicate PAHs as a pollutant of concern that should be a focus of future studies. Other PAH sources besides traffic were also associated with higher odds of preterm birth, as was ammonium nitrate PM2.5, the latter suggesting potential importance of secondary pollutants. Future studies should focus on accurate modeling of both local and regional spatial and temporal distributions, and incorporation of source information.
Related articles
- Air pollution ‘ups preterm birth risk by 30 pc’ (news.bioscholar.com)
- US preterm birth rate under 12 percent, the lowest level in nearly a decade (eurekalert.org)
- U.S. Gets ‘C’ In Premature Birth Rates (huffingtonpost.com)
- World Prematurity Day (gallipot.wordpress.com)
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November 20, 2011 - Posted by Janice Flahiff | Public Health | Air pollution, Particulate, Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon, pregnancy, Preterm birth, toxicants, traffic-related air toxicants
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