Prenatal Exposure to Source-Specific Fine Particulate Matter and Autism Spectrum Disorder.

Prenatal Exposure to Source-Specific Fine Particulate Matter and Autism Spectrum Disorder.

Publication date: Oct 11, 2024

In this study, associations between prenatal exposure to fine particulate matter (PM2. 5) from 9 sources and development of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) were assessed in a population-based retrospective pregnancy cohort in southern California. The cohort included 318,750 mother-child singleton pairs. ASD cases (N = 4559) were identified by ICD codes. Source-specific PM2. 5 concentrations were estimated from a chemical transport model with a 4 cD7 4 km resolution and assigned to maternal pregnancy residential addresses. Cox proportional hazard models were used to estimate the hazard ratios (HR) of ASD development for each individual source. We also adjusted for total PM2. 5 mass and in a separate model for all other sources simultaneously. Increased ASD risk was observed with on-road gasoline (HR [CI]: 1. 18 [1. 13, 1. 24]), off-road gasoline (1. 15 [1. 12, 1. 19]), off-road diesel (1. 08 [1. 05, 1. 10]), food cooking (1. 05 [1. 02, 1. 08]), aircraft (1. 04 [1. 01, 1. 06]), and natural gas combustion (1. 09 [1. 06, 1. 11]), each scaled to standard deviation increases in concentration. On-road gasoline and off-road gasoline were robust for other pollutant groups. PM2. 5 emitted from different sources may have different impacts on ASD. The results also identify PM source mixtures for toxicological investigations that may provide evidence for future public health policies.

Concepts Keywords
Autism air pollution sources
California autism spectrum disorders
Cooking gasoline
Pregnancy PM2.5
pregnancy
prenatal exposures

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH Autism Spectrum Disorder
drug DRUGBANK Medical air

Original Article

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