TY - JOUR
T1 - Prenatal metal mixtures and sex-specific infant negative affectivity
AU - Cowell, Whitney
AU - Colicino, Elena
AU - Levin-Schwartz, Yuri
AU - Enlow, Michelle Bosquet
AU - Amarasiriwardena, Chitra
AU - Andra, Syam S.
AU - Gennings, Chris
AU - Wright, Robert O.
AU - Wright, Rosalind J.
N1 - Funding Information:
The results reported herein correspond to specific aim 1 of grant R01ES030302 to investigator R.J.W. from the National Institute of Environmental Health Science. This work was also supported by grants R01HL095606, R01HD082078, R21ES021318, P30ES023515, R01ES013744, R24ES028522, and UG3OD023337 from the National Institutes of Health. During the preparation of this manuscript, W.C. and Y.L.S. were supported by T32HD049311 from the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development. Funding for open access publishing was provided by T32HD049311. We would like to acknowledge Mahmoud Awawda at the Mount Sinai Lautenberg Health Science Laboratory for performing elemental analysis and Shirisha Yelamanchili at the Mount Sinai HHEAR laboratory hub, who performed the measurements of creatinine in urine.
Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2021 The Authors. Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. on behalf of The Environmental Epidemiology. All rights reserved.
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - Background: Prenatal exposure to metals has been associated with a range of adverse neurocognitive outcomes; however, associations with early behavioral development are less well understood. We examined joint exposure to multiple co-occurring metals in relation to infant negative affect, a stable temperamental trait linked to psychopathology among children and adults. Methods: Analyses included 308 mother-infant pairs enrolled in the PRISM pregnancy cohort. We measured As, Ba, Cd, Cs, Cr, Pb, and Sb in urine, collected on average during late pregnancy, by ICP-MS. At age 6 months, we assessed negative affect using the Infant Behavior Questionnaire—Revised. We used Weighted Quantile Sum (WQS) regression with repeated holdout validation to estimate the joint association between the metals and global negative affectivity, as well as four subdomains (Fear, Sadness, Distress to Limitations, and Falling Reactivity). We also tested for a sex interaction with estimated stratified weights. Results: In adjusted models, urinary metals were associated with higher scores on the Fear scale (βWQS = 0.20, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.09, 0.30), which captures behavioral inhibition, characterized by startle or distress to sudden changes in the environment and inhibited approach to novelty. We observed a significant sex interaction (95% CI for the cross-product term: −0.19, −0.01), and stratified weights showed girls (61.6%) contributed substantially more to the mixture effect compared with boys (38.4%). Overall, Ba contributed the greatest mixture weight (22.5%), followed by Cs (14.9%) and As (14.6%). Conclusions: Prenatal exposure to metals was associated with increased infant scores on the temperamental domain of fear, with girls showing particular sensitivity.
AB - Background: Prenatal exposure to metals has been associated with a range of adverse neurocognitive outcomes; however, associations with early behavioral development are less well understood. We examined joint exposure to multiple co-occurring metals in relation to infant negative affect, a stable temperamental trait linked to psychopathology among children and adults. Methods: Analyses included 308 mother-infant pairs enrolled in the PRISM pregnancy cohort. We measured As, Ba, Cd, Cs, Cr, Pb, and Sb in urine, collected on average during late pregnancy, by ICP-MS. At age 6 months, we assessed negative affect using the Infant Behavior Questionnaire—Revised. We used Weighted Quantile Sum (WQS) regression with repeated holdout validation to estimate the joint association between the metals and global negative affectivity, as well as four subdomains (Fear, Sadness, Distress to Limitations, and Falling Reactivity). We also tested for a sex interaction with estimated stratified weights. Results: In adjusted models, urinary metals were associated with higher scores on the Fear scale (βWQS = 0.20, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.09, 0.30), which captures behavioral inhibition, characterized by startle or distress to sudden changes in the environment and inhibited approach to novelty. We observed a significant sex interaction (95% CI for the cross-product term: −0.19, −0.01), and stratified weights showed girls (61.6%) contributed substantially more to the mixture effect compared with boys (38.4%). Overall, Ba contributed the greatest mixture weight (22.5%), followed by Cs (14.9%) and As (14.6%). Conclusions: Prenatal exposure to metals was associated with increased infant scores on the temperamental domain of fear, with girls showing particular sensitivity.
KW - Infancy
KW - Metals
KW - Mixtures
KW - Negative affect
KW - Prenatal
KW - Temperament
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85119574614&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1097/EE9.0000000000000147
DO - 10.1097/EE9.0000000000000147
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85119574614
SN - 2474-7882
VL - 5
JO - Environmental Epidemiology
JF - Environmental Epidemiology
IS - 2
M1 - e147
ER -