作者
Hong Lv,Jing Wang,Kan Ye,Jinghan Wang,Weiting Wang,Jiangbo Du,Lingmin Hu,Wenhui Guo,Rui Qin,Xin Xu,Yuanyan Dou,Tian‐Yu Sun,Xiaoyu Liu,Bo Xu,Xiumei Han,Kun Zhou,Shiyao Tao,Qun Lü,Tao Jiang,Yang Zhao,Guangfu Jin,Hongxia Ma,Yankai Xia,Jiong Li,Hongbing Shen,Xia Chi,Yuan Lin,Zhibin Hu,Jiangsu Birth Cohort Study Group
摘要
While maternal exposure to high metal levels during pregnancy is an established risk factor for birth defects, the role of paternal exposure remains largely unknown. We aimed to assess the associations of prenatal paternal and maternal metal exposure and parental coexposure with birth defects in singletons. This study conducted within the Jiangsu Birth Cohort recruited couples in early pregnancy. We measured their urinary concentrations for 25 metals. A total of 1675 parent-offspring trios were included. The prevalence of any birth defects among infants by one year of age was 7.82%. Paternal-specific gravity-corrected urinary concentrations of titanium, vanadium, chromium, manganese, cobalt, nickel, copper, and selenium and maternal vanadium, chromium, nickel, copper, selenium, and antimony were associated with a 21-91% increased risk of birth defects after adjusting for covariates. These effects persisted after mutual adjustment for the spouse's exposure. Notably, when assessing the parental mixture effect by Bayesian kernel machine regression, paternal and maternal chromium exposure ranked the highest in relative importance. Parental coexposure to metal mixture showed a pronounced joint effect on the risk of overall birth defects, as well as for some specific subtypes. Our findings suggested a couple-based prevention strategy for metal exposure to reduce birth defects in offspring.