Dose dependence of prenatal fluoride exposure associations with cognitive performance at school age in three prospective studies

Author:

Grandjean Philippe12ORCID,Meddis Alessandra3ORCID,Nielsen Flemming1ORCID,Beck Iben H1ORCID,Bilenberg Niels4,Goodman Carly V5,Hu Howard6,Till Christine5,Budtz-Jørgensen Esben3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Environmental Medicine, University of Southern Denmark , Odense, Denmark

2. Department of Environmental Health, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health , Boston, MA, USA

3. Department of Biostatistics, University of Copenhagen , Denmark

4. Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Odense University Hospital , Odense, Denmark

5. Department of Psychology, Faculty of Health, York University , Toronto, ON, Canada

6. Department of Population and Public Health Sciences, Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California , Los Angeles, CA, USA

Abstract

Abstract Background Fluoride may be a developmental neurotoxicant at elevated exposures. We merged new data from a prospective Odense Child Cohort (OCC) with results from two previous birth cohort studies from Mexico and Canada to characterize the dose–effect relationship in greater detail. Methods The OCC contributed 837 mother–child pairs to the total of >1500. We measured creatinine-adjusted urine-fluoride concentrations in maternal urine samples obtained during late pregnancy. Child IQ was determined at age 7 years using an abbreviated version of the Wechsler Intelligence Scales for Children. Findings from the three cohorts were used to calculate the joint benchmark concentration (BMC) and the lower confidence limit (BMCL) after adjustment for covariables. Results In the OCC, urine-fluoride concentrations varied between 0.08 and 3.04 mg/l (median 0.52 mg/l) but were not significantly associated with full-scale IQ at age 7 years (β = 0.08; 95% confidence interval −1.14 to 1.30 for a doubling in exposure). No difference was apparent between boys and girls. In the OCC, the BMC was 0.92 mg/l, with a BMCL of 0.30 mg/l. The joint analysis of all three cohorts showed a statistically significant association between urine-fluoride and IQ, with a BMC of 0.45 mg/l (BMCL, 0.28 mg/l), slightly higher than the BMC previously reported for the two North American cohorts alone. Conclusions As the BMCL reflects an approximate threshold for developmental neurotoxicity, the results suggest that pregnant women and children may need protection against fluoride toxicity.

Funder

Danish Council for Independent Research, Medical Sciences

Novo Nordisk Foundation

National Institte of Environmental Health Sciences

The ELEMENT study

MIREC

Odense University Hospital

Municipality of Odense

Odense University Hospital Research Foundation

Odense Patient data Exploratory Network

Helsefonden

HBM4EU

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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