| Mothers' Exposure to Air Pollutants Linked
to Chromosome Damage in Babies
A new study of 60 newborns in New York City reveals that exposure
of expectant mothers to combustion-related urban air pollution
may alter the structure of babies’ chromosomes while in the
womb. While previous experiments have linked such genetic alterations
to an increased risk of leukemia and other cancers, much larger
studies would be required to determine the precise increase in
risk as these children reach adulthood.
The air pollutants considered in this study include emissions
from cars, trucks, bus engines, residential heating, power
generation and tobacco smoking. These pollutants can cross
the placenta and reach the fetus.
The study was funded by the National Institute of Environmental
Health Sciences, part of the National Institutes of Health,
the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, and other private
foundations. The research was conducted by scientists from
the Columbia University Center for Children’s Environmental
Health. Study results will be published in the February issue
of Cancer Epidemiology Biomarkers and Prevention, and are available
online at http://cebp.aacrjournals.org.
“This is the first study to show that environmental
exposures to specific combustion pollutants during pregnancy
can result in chromosomal abnormalities in fetal tissues,” said
Kenneth Olden, Ph.D., the director of NIEHS. “These findings
may lead to new approaches for the prevention of certain cancers.”
Researchers monitored exposure to airborne pollutants, known
as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), among non-smoking
African-American and Dominican mothers residing in three low-income
neighborhoods of New York City Harlem, Washington Heights
and the South Bronx.
“Although the study was conducted in Manhattan neighborhoods,
exhaust pollutants are prevalent in all urban areas, and therefore
the study results are relevant to populations in other urban
areas,” said Dr. Frederica P. Perera, director of the
Columbia Center for Children’s Environmental Health and
senior author of the study.
Exposure to combustion pollutants was assessed through personal
questionnaires and portable air monitors worn by the mothers
during the third trimester of their pregnancies. Researchers
then calculated the concentration of air pollution to which
each pregnant woman and her baby were exposed. Study participants
exposed to air pollution levels below the average were designated
as having “low exposure,” while those exposed to
pollution levels above the average were designated as having “high
exposure.”
“We observed 4.7 chromosome abnormalities per thousand
white blood cells in newborns from mothers in the low exposure
group, and 7.2 abnormalities per thousand white blood cells
in newborns from the high exposure mothers,” said Perera. “In
particular, stable alterations were increased, which are of
greatest concern for potential risk of cancer, since cells
with this type of abnormality can persist in the body for long
periods of time.”
Chromosomal abnormalities were measured in umbilical cord
blood by a “chromosome painting” technique called
fluorescence in situ hybridization, one that enabled researchers
to observe the structural changes within the chromosome. Chromosomes
are the threadlike packages in the nucleus of the cell that
contain the cell’s genetic information.
“This evidence that air pollutants can alter chromosomes
in utero is troubling since other studies have validated this
type of genetic alteration as a biomarker of cancer risk,” said
Perera. “While we can’t estimate the precise increase
in cancer risk, these findings underscore the need for policymakers
at the federal, state, and local levels to take appropriate
steps to protect children from these avoidable exposures.”
Previous studies conducted by Perera and colleagues showed
that combustion-related air pollutants significantly reduce
fetal growth, which may affect cognitive development during
childhood.
The study is part of a broader, multi-year research project, “The
Mothers & Children Study in New York City,” started
in 1998, which examines the health effects of exposure of pregnant
women and babies to air pollutants from vehicle exhaust, the
commercial burning of fuels, and tobacco smoking, as well as
from residential use of pesticides and allergens.
The National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences is
a federal agency that conducts and funds basic research on
the health effects of exposure to environmental agents.
For more information, please contact John Peterson, public
affairs specialist with the NIEHS Office of Communications,
at (919) 541-7860, or call Heather Ross, senior media specialist
with the Columbia Center for Children’s Environmental
Health, at (212) 576-2700, ext. 243.
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