Early-life exposome and lung function in children in Europe: an analysis of data from the longitudinal, population-based HELIX cohort

Author

Agier, Lydiane

Basagaña Flores, Xavier

Maitre, Lea

Granum, Berit

Bird, Philippa K.

Casas Sanahuja, Maribel

Oftedal, Bente

Wright, John

Andrusaityte, Sandra

de Castro, Montserrat

Cequier Manciñeiras, Enrique

Chatzi, Leda

Donaire Gonzalez, David

Grazuleviciene, Regina

Haug, Line S.

Sakhi, Amrit Kaur

Leventakou, Vasiliki

McEachan, Rosemary

Nieuwenhuijsen, Mark J.

Petraviciene, Inga

Robinson, Oliver

Roumeliotaki, Theano

Sunyer, Jordi

Tamayo-Uria, Ibon

Thomsen, Cathrine

Urquiza, José

Valentín, Antònia

Slama, Rémy

Vrijheid, Martine

Siroux, Valérie

Publication date

2020-04-24T09:48:54Z

2020-04-24T09:48:54Z

2019-02-06



Abstract

Background: Several single-exposure studies have documented possible effects of environmental factors on lung function, but none has relied on an exposome approach. We aimed to evaluate the association between a broad range of prenatal and postnatal lifestyle and environmental exposures and lung function in children. Methods: In this analysis, we used data from 1033 mother–child pairs from the European Human Early-Life Exposome (HELIX) cohort (consisting of six existing longitudinal birth cohorts in France, Greece, Lithuania, Norway, Spain, and the UK of children born between 2003 and 2009) for whom a valid spirometry test was recorded for the child. 85 prenatal and 125 postnatal exposures relating to outdoor, indoor, chemical, and lifestyle factors were assessed, and lung function was measured by spirometry in children at age 6–12 years. Two agnostic linear regression methods, a deletion-substitution-addition (DSA) algorithm considering all exposures simultaneously, and an exposome-wide association study (ExWAS) considering exposures independently, were applied to test the association with forced expiratory volume in 1 s percent predicted values (FEV1%). We tested for two-way interaction between exposures and corrected for confounding by co-exposures. Findings: In the 1033 children (median age 8·1 years, IQR 6·5–9·0), mean FEV1% was 98·8% (SD 13·2). In the ExWAS, prenatal perfluorononanoate (p=0·034) and perfluorooctanoate (p=0·030) exposures were associated with lower FEV1%, and inverse distance to nearest road during pregnancy (p=0·030) was associated with higher FEV1%. Nine postnatal exposures were associated with lower FEV1%: copper (p=0·041), ethyl-paraben (p=0·029), five phthalate metabolites (mono-2-ethyl 5-carboxypentyl phthalate [p=0·016], mono-2-ethyl-5-hydroxyhexyl phthalate [p=0·023], mono-2-ethyl-5-oxohexyl phthalate [p=0·0085], mono-4-methyl-7-oxooctyl phthalate [p=0·040], and the sum of di-ethylhexyl phthalate metabolites [p=0·014]), house crowding (p=0·015), and facility density around schools (p=0·027). However, no exposure passed the significance threshold when corrected for multiple testing in ExWAS, and none was selected with the DSA algorithm, including when testing for exposure interactions. Interpretation: Our systematic exposome approach identified several environmental exposures, mainly chemicals, that might be associated with lung function. Reducing exposure to these ubiquitous chemicals could help to prevent the development of chronic respiratory disease.


European Community's Seventh Framework Programme (HELIX project).

Document Type

Article
Published version

Language

English

Publisher

Elsevier

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1016/S2542-5196(19)30010-5

The Lancet Planetary Health, 2019, vol. 3, núm. 2, p. e81-e92

Rights

cc-by-nc-nd (c) Agier, Lydiane et al., 2019

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/

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