Arsenic exposure from drinking water and birth weight
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Date
2003
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
Abstract
Background: Arsenic exposures front drinking water increase the risk of various cancers and noncancer health endpoints. Limited evidence suggests that arsenic may have adverse human reproductive effects. We investigated the association between drinking water arsenic exposure and fetal growth, as manifest in birth weight.
Methods: We conducted a prospective cohort study in two Chilean cities with contrasting drinking water arsenic levels: Antofagasta (40 mug/L) and Valparaiso (<1 μg/L). Study subjects completed in-depth interviews and provided urine samples for exposure analysis. We obtained pregnancy and birth information from medical records. The birth weight analysis was restricted to liveborn, singleton infants born between December 1998 and February 2000.
Results: The final study group consisted of 424 infants from Antofagasta and 420 from Valparaiso. After controlling for confounders, results of the multivariable analysis indicated that Antofagasta infants had lower mean birth weight (-57 g; 95% confidence interval = -123 to 9).
Conclusion: This study suggests that moderate arsenic exposures from drinking water (<50 mug/L) during pregnancy are associated with reduction in birth weight, similar in magnitude to that resulting from other environmental exposures such as environmental tobacco smoke and benzene.
Methods: We conducted a prospective cohort study in two Chilean cities with contrasting drinking water arsenic levels: Antofagasta (40 mug/L) and Valparaiso (<1 μg/L). Study subjects completed in-depth interviews and provided urine samples for exposure analysis. We obtained pregnancy and birth information from medical records. The birth weight analysis was restricted to liveborn, singleton infants born between December 1998 and February 2000.
Results: The final study group consisted of 424 infants from Antofagasta and 420 from Valparaiso. After controlling for confounders, results of the multivariable analysis indicated that Antofagasta infants had lower mean birth weight (-57 g; 95% confidence interval = -123 to 9).
Conclusion: This study suggests that moderate arsenic exposures from drinking water (<50 mug/L) during pregnancy are associated with reduction in birth weight, similar in magnitude to that resulting from other environmental exposures such as environmental tobacco smoke and benzene.
Description
Keywords
arsenic, drinking water, reproductive effects, environmental exposure, birth weight, ENVIRONMENTAL RISKS, DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS, NORTHERN SWEDEN, SPONTANEOUS-ABORTION, PREGNANCY OUTCOMES, DIABETES-MELLITUS, CANCER-MORTALITY, VASCULAR-DISEASE, LIPID PEROXIDES, YOUNG-CHILDREN