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Prenatal exposure to persistent and non-persistent chemical mixtures and associations with adverse birth outcomes in the Atlanta African American Maternal-Child Cohort.

Stephanie M EickYouran TanKaitlin R TaiblP Barry RyanDana Boyd BarrAnke HülsJasmin A EatmanParinya PanuwetPriya E D'SouzaVolha YakimavetsGrace E LeePatricia A BrennanElizabeth J CorwinAnne L DunlopDonghai Liang
Published in: Journal of exposure science & environmental epidemiology (2023)
African Americans (AAs) experience higher rates of preterm birth and fetal growth restriction relative to other pregnant populations. Differential in utero exposure to environmental chemicals may partially explain these health disparities, as AAs are disproportionately exposed to environmental hazards. In the present study, we analyzed serum and urine samples for levels of 43 environmental chemicals. We used quantile g-computation, principal component analysis, and BKMR to assess associations between chemical exposure mixtures and adverse birth outcomes. Our findings suggest that prenatal exposure to multiple classes of chemicals is associated with reduced birthweight z-scores, a proxy for fetal growth, in AAs.
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