Prenatal exposure to metal mixtures, body mass index trajectories in early life and effect modifiers: insights from a prospective birth cohort study

Journal of Hazardous Materials(2024)

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Abstract
Current scientific knowledge is insufficient on the effects of metal mixtures on early life growth trajectories. This study included 7,118 mother-infant pairs from a Chinese birth cohort. Concentrations of 18 maternal urinary metals were quantified, and growth trajectories were conducted based on standardized body mass index (BMI) for up to eight times from 0 to 2 years. A three-phase analytical framework was applied to explore the risk ratios (RR) and 95% confidence intervals (95% CI) of co-exposure to metals on dynamic growth, along with potential modifiers. Five growth trajectory groups were identified. Exposure to metal mixtures driven by thallium (Tl, 34.8%) and aluminum (Al, 16.2%) was associated with an increased risk of low-rising trajectory (RR=1.58, 95% CI: 1.25, 2.00); however, exposure to mixtures driven by strontium (Sr, 49.5%) exhibited an inverse correlation (RR = 0.81, 95% CI: 0.67, 0.97). Furthermore, infants with varying levels of Tl, Al and Sr, as well as modifiers including pre-pregnancy BMI and infant sex faced distinct risks of low-rising trajectory. Our findings highlighted the Tl, Al, and Sr as key metals in relation to the low-rising trajectory in early life characterized as catch-up growth, with pre-pregnancy BMI and infant sex exerting as potential modifiers.
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Key words
Prenatal exposure,Metal mixture,Growth trajectory,Birth cohort,BMI z-score,Infant growth
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