A protocol for estimating health burden posed by early life exposure to ambient fine particulate matter and its heavy metal composition: A mother-child birth (ELitE) cohort from central India

Author:

Trushna Tanwi1,Yadav Vikas1,Mandal Uday Kumar1,Diwan Vishal2,Tiwari Rajnarayan R1,Ahirwar Rajesh3,Raj Dharma4,Rana Sindhuprava4,Surve Suchitra Vishwambhar5,Dey Sagnik6,Sabde Yogesh Damodar1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Environmental Health and Epidemiology, ICMR-National Institute for Research in Environmental Health, Bhopal, Madhya Pradesh, India

2. Department of Environmental Monitoring and Exposure Assessment (Water and Soil), National Institute for Research in Environmental Health, Bhopal, Madhya Pradesh, India

3. Department of Environmental Biochemistry, ICMR-National Institute for Research in Environmental Health, Bhopal, Madhya Pradesh, India

4. Department of Biostatistics and Bioinformatics, ICMR-National Institute for Research in Environmental Health, Bhopal, Madhya Pradesh, India

5. Department of Child Health Research, National Institute for Research in Reproductive and Child Health (ICMR-NIRRCH), Mumbai, Maharashtra, India

6. Centre for Atmospheric Sciences, Indian Institute of Technology (IIT-Delhi), New Delhi, Delhi, India

Abstract

Abstract

Background Pregnant women and children are vulnerable to air pollution-related adverse health effects, especially those residing in low-resource and high-exposure settings like India. However, evidence regarding the effects of early-life exposure to air particulate matter (PM) on childhood growth/developmental trajectory is contradictory; evidence about specific constituents of PM like heavy metals is limited. Similarly, there are few Indian cohorts investigating PM exposure and the incidence of acute respiratory infection during infancy. This study protocol aims to fill these critical gaps in knowledge. Methods We aim to establish a mother-child birth cohort through the enrolment of 1566 pregnant women residing in two urban areas of central India. Antenatally we will collect socioeconomic, demographic, and clinical information, and details of confounding variables from these mothers, who will then be followed up till delivery to assess their exposure to air PM. Biomonitoring to assess heavy metal exposure will be limited to the top five heavy metals found in the air of their residential city. At delivery, pregnancy outcomes will be noted followed by postnatal follow-up of live-born children till the first year of life to assess their achievement of growth/development milestones and exposure to pollutants. We will also estimate the incidence of ARI during infancy. Discussion This manuscript describes the protocol for an Indian mother-child air pollution birth cohort study which aims to generate comprehensive evidence regarding the adverse effects of early-life exposure to air PM and its constituent heavy metals among Indian children. This study will provide an epidemiological basis for further understanding in this context. Finally, by reporting our carefully planned study methods/outcome measures, which are at par with published and ongoing birth cohorts, we aim to serve as the starting point for similar cohorts in the future which when considered together would generate enough evidence to facilitate context-specific policy-making and development of appropriate prevention and mitigation strategies.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

Reference148 articles.

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2. Greenstone M, Hasenkopf C. Air Quality Life Index (AQLI) – 2023 Annual Update. Chicago: Energy Policy Institute at the University of Chicago (EPIC); 2023.

3. World Health Organization. WHO global air quality guidelines: particulate matter (PM2. 5 and PM10), ozone, nitrogen dioxide, sulfur dioxide and carbon monoxide. World Health Organization; 2021.

4. Climate and Clean Air Coalition, Scientific and Technical Advisory. Panel (STAP) of the International Day of Clean Air for blue skies. UNEP Air Pollution Action Note – Data you need to know. 2023.

5. Health effects of air pollution exposure on children and adolescents in São Paulo, Brazil;Braga AL;Pediatr Pulmonol,2001

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