Article Text
Abstract
Aims: To determine the factors that affect why some infants receive higher exposures relative to the mother’s body burden than do others.
Methods: A total of 159 mother-infant pairs from a cohort of women receiving prenatal care at Magee-Womens Hospital in Pittsburgh, PA from 1992 to 1995 provided blood samples at delivery for lead determination. The difference between cord and maternal blood lead concentration (PbB) and a dichotomous variable indicator of higher cord than maternal PbB, were examined as indicators of relative transfer. Women were interviewed twice during the pregnancy about lifestyle, medical history, calcium nutrition, and physical activity.
Results: Higher blood pressure was associated with relatively greater cord compared with maternal PbB, as was maternal alcohol use. Sickle cell trait and higher haemoglobin were associated with a lower cord relative to maternal blood lead PbB. No association was seen with smoking, physical exertion, or calcium consumption.
Conclusion: While reduction in maternal exposure will reduce fetal exposure, it may also be possible to mitigate infant lead exposure by reducing transfer from the pregnant woman. Interventions aimed at reducing blood pressure and alcohol consumption during pregnancy may be useful in this regard.
- AAS, atomic absorption spectroscopy
- ALA-D, δ-aminolevulinic acid dehydratase
- BMI, body mass index
- CLIA, Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendment of 1988
- Hb, haemoglobin
- PbB, blood lead concentration
- RBC, red blood cell
- lead
- pregnancy
- fetal intoxication
- cord blood
- low levels
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- AAS, atomic absorption spectroscopy
- ALA-D, δ-aminolevulinic acid dehydratase
- BMI, body mass index
- CLIA, Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendment of 1988
- Hb, haemoglobin
- PbB, blood lead concentration
- RBC, red blood cell
Exposure to lead causes developmental problems. Although postnatal and childhood exposure can have effects at low concentrations,1 children who have been exposed to lead in utero may also suffer from deficits in development (such as intelligence, information processing, memory, and verbal skills),2–7 growth,8,9 and behaviour.10,11 Because lead is incorporated into the bone matrix where it is retained for decades,12,13 prenatal exposure to lead also contributes to an earlier and cumulatively greater body burden.14,15
Maternal and infant blood lead levels (PbB) are highly correlated across a wide range of exposure levels,16–18 so the most obvious sources of variation in fetal lead dose are those that affect the maternal PbB. Some sources of infant PbB reflect direct maternal exposure, such as occupational lead exposure, exposure to lead paint, or use of lead glazed ceramics.19 Since cigarette smoke contains lead,20,21 smoking and passive smoking could fall into this category as well.22 Other factors associated with infant PbB may reflect a lifestyle associated with increased environmental exposure to lead. Maternal coffee consumption and alcohol use,22,23 higher blood pressure,24,25 and seasonal patterns26–28 are such variables.
For over 30 years, it has been recognised that lead freely crosses the placenta via diffusion.29,30 It has generally been assumed that there is no general enhancement or barrier to transfer.31 However, factors besides the maternal lead exposure and PbB also appear to affect the concentration in fetal blood. Although maternal PbB is on average about 30% higher than the infant’s, in most studies approximately one quarter of the infants have PbB higher than their mothers.32–36 Rothenberg and coworkers reported that drinking milk rarely, higher maternal age and parity, and caesarean section delivery predicted increased cord lead after controlling for maternal PbB.37,38 Sikorski et al found higher maternal-fetal ratios in rural subjects, and a correlation between maternal:fetal lead ratio and maternal:fetal iron and zinc ratios.39
Given inter-individual variability in maternal:cord PbB, we hypothesised that there might be modifiable factors that contribute to passage of lead to the fetus and that identification of such factors could suggest ways to reduce the burden of lead in newborns beyond what is achieved by reducing maternal lead exposure. For this reason, we examined variables that might influence the amount of lead that an infant receives during gestation relative to maternal burden.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Subjects
During 1992–95, women were recruited for a longitudinal study of lead, calcium, and blood pressure during pregnancy.40 Women were eligible to participate if they were in prenatal care before week 12, planned to deliver at Magee-Womens Hospital, had single gestations, spoke English, were over 18, were white or African-American, and did not have chronic diseases. A total of 498 women were part of the initial cohort; 24 delivered elsewhere and 44 miscarried. Whole blood samples were collected from the women at up to five points during pregnancy and at delivery. Because of budget constraints, it was only possible to assay one sample per trimester for some women: 345 had at least one lead measurement taken, and of these, 229 had PbB determination on their blood sample collected at delivery. A total of 162 infants had cord blood lead determined, leading to 159 pairs with lead measurements available for this analysis (fig 1).
Protocols used in this study were approved by the Institutional Review Boards of Magee-Womens Hospital and the University of North Carolina School of Public Health. Written informed consent was obtained from all subjects.
Main messages
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Higher blood pressure in some groups and alcohol consumption were associated with more lead in cord blood relative to maternal blood lead.
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Higher haemoglobin and sickle cell trait were associated with reduced lead in cord blood relative to maternal blood lead.
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No associations were seen with calcium intake, physical activity, or smoking.
Lead determination
The protocol for blood drawing and lead measurement has been previously described.40 The University of California San Francisco–San Francisco General Hospital Metals Laboratory analysed samples concurrently with the study data collection, using electrothermal atomic absorption spectroscopy (AAS) with continuum background correction. Interassay precision had a coefficient of variation of 6% at 2 μg/dl. In 1998 the Lead Poisoning/Trace Elements Laboratory at the New York State Department of Health analysed blood samples that had been frozen, using electrothermal atomisation AAS with Zeeman background correction.41 This method is transferable to a continuum based AAS instrumentation.42 Intermediate precision estimates using New York State’s RM 028 (6.7 μg/dl) are 0.2 μg/dl by the continuum correction method and 0.1 μg/dl by Zeeman corrected AAS.41 At a detection limit of 0.75 for Zeeman AAS and 0.50 for continuum AAS, the precision is approximately 0.25 and 0.17 μg/dl, similar to that reported at 6.7 μg/dl.
Policy implications
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These findings give additional support to efforts to control blood pressure (particularly in those over 30 years of age), encourage iron supplementation when appropriate, and reduce alcohol consumption during pregnancy.
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Interventions to reduce prenatal exposure to lead can target not only overall maternal exposure, but also modifiable factors that influence transfer from the mother to the fetus.
Several comparisons were made to determine the acceptability of values measured years after blood collection. First, both laboratories participated satisfactorily in Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendment (CLIA) approved proficiency testing programmes for blood lead using similar analytical methodologies. Twenty specimens were analysed by both laboratories, and of these, 80% were within 1 μg/dl, with the remainder split between specimens that were higher in the concurrent analysis and those higher in the later determination. Second, we recently replicated our published analyses40 of the maternal determinants of blood lead concentration (PbB) and found that the regression models showed the same variables to be predictive regardless of whether the lead determinations were conducted concurrently or later. Third, the findings in the present examination of cord versus maternal blood lead were unchanged by inclusion or exclusion of the later assays. Therefore, we included them in the analyses presented.
Of the 159 pairs with information on both maternal and cord lead, 141 PbB determinations were completed concurrently with specimen collection (1992–95) and 18 in 1998. In 106 cases, the maternal blood draw was performed during labour, and in 53 cases, after delivery. PbB was expressed in μg of lead per dl of whole blood.
Data collection
Trained staff interviewed the women face-to-face twice during their pregnancies, once shortly after enrolment (mean week of gestation: 14, range 8–18), and once late in the pregnancy (mean week: 36, range 31–41). Women were questioned about their medical, occupational, and lifestyle characteristics. Calcium intake was assessed through a modified Block food frequency questionnaire,43 which included the foods that account for most of the calcium consumed in the typical US diet,44 as well as questions on antacid, supplement, and vitamin use. Dietary calcium was calculated using the Block DIETSYS software version 3.0,45 and the Physician’s Desk Reference provided estimates for calcium from antacids and supplements.46 Blood pressure was taken by study personnel according to the protocol of the ARIC (Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities) study.47 Medical records were abstracted for details of medications used; prenatal, labour, and delivery histories; and information about the infant.
Predictor variables
Certain factors were considered as possible sources of variation in the difference between maternal and fetal PbB, based on previous literature on humans and animals (table 1). Since blood flow and blood pressure have been linked to lead in humans and guinea pigs,48 we evaluated systolic and diastolic blood pressure and self-reported hypertension among the variables that we screened. Because the blood-bone lead equilibrium changes during pregnancy, calcium (which may affect the release of lead from bone40,49), haemoglobin (Hb), and sickle cell trait were examined. Reproductive history, medication use, and infection could also have effects on the structure or blood flow of the placenta.50 Because fetal stress has been associated with increased relative lead burden,51 we looked at factors such as birth weight and Apgar score. Finally, factors that might reflect the measurement and sample properties were examined, such as delayed versus concurrent lead analysis and time of maternal blood draw relative to delivery.
To represent variability in amount of lead transferred, the difference between cord and maternal whole PbB concentration, as well as a dichotomous indicator of whether the cord PbB was higher/not higher than maternal PbB, were the outcomes for this study. The ratio of maternal to cord PbB was also examined.
Statistical analysis
To determine comparability across three groups of subjects, analysis of variance was performed. The three groups were: those without a cord PbB, those for whom PbB was measured a few years after data collection, and those with cord PbB determination performed concurrently with data collection.
Initially, to reduce a large list of candidate predictors of potential maternal-fetal transfer, bivariate associations were examined for each variable and outcome; variables that were significant at α = 0.20 or OR greater than 2 were included in subsequent linear and logistic models. All variables that passed this initial bivariate screen were then included in multiple linear (for the difference) and logistic (for the dichotomous outcome) models, in which variables were eliminated that satisfied a criterion of p > 0.20. In the next step, some variables that were not predictive of the outcome at α = 0.20 were reintroduced to examine as potential confounding: race, age, parity, and smoking. In most cases, inclusion of these variables did not change the effect estimates in the multivariable models, so they were not included in the final model.52 Finally, variables that were predictive of the cord-maternal PbB difference were entered in the logistic model, and vice versa. Interactions with age and weight gain were examined as well.
A number of sensitivity analyses were performed. Because the samples analysed later may have been compromised, we report models with and without those observations. The extent of the effect of missing data was assessed using multiple imputation with SAS’s PROC MI and PROC MIANALYZE. Sickle cell trait, weight gain, and alcohol use later in pregnancy were each missing for some observations, and the imputation model contained those variables as well as race, age, pre-pregnancy body mass index (BMI), education, smoking status, alcohol use at other times, and the other variables in the prediction model. As additional sensitivity analyses, the models were fit using only the measurements that could be considered to be more robust: those maternal and cord samples with PbB above 1 μg/dl and the maternal specimens collected before delivery.
RESULTS
Mean maternal PbB at delivery was 1.93 μg/dl, with a range of 0.55–4.70 μg/dl; mean cord lead was 1.64 μg/dl, with a range of 0.05–3.95 μg/dl. The Pearson correlation coefficient between maternal and cord PbB was r = 0.79. On average, cord PbB was lower than maternal PbB by 0.30 μg/dl (95% CI −0.38 to −0.21 μg/dl), with a range of −1.93 to 1.20; 45 of the pairs (28%) had the cord blood value higher than the mother’s PbB.
The women included in this analysis differed in some ways from those in the overall parent study: they were more likely to be white, nulliparous, and higher income than those lacking a cord measurement (table 2). Although the samples analysed for lead at a later time point were chosen randomly, the women differed in some respects from those for whom PbB was measured concurrently with data collection: they were more likely to be white and older, and their babies were of lower birth weight.
Bivariate analysis indicated a number of factors associated with maternal-fetal PbB difference (table 1), but in multivariate modelling, the strongest associations were seen with medical factors (table 3). Maternal Hb and sickle cell trait were associated with reduced fetal lead relative to maternal lead. Compared with the 25th centile of maternal Hb, the 75th centile was associated with 1.32 μg/dl lower cord relative to maternal blood lead. Children born to women with sickle cell trait had on average 0.8 μg/dl relatively lower lead. There was a significant interaction between age and blood pressure as well as weight gain and blood pressure: among mothers aged 30 years or over, or those who had gained more weight during pregnancy, a higher blood pressure was associated with a relatively greater lead concentration in the cord blood. The findings were unchanged when analysis was limited to the specimens analysed concurrently with data collection (table 3).
Similar factors were significant in the logistic model (table 4), although all the women with sickle cell trait (n = 5) had maternal lead higher than their infant, so this variable could not be included. The logistic model also showed increased odds of the cord PbB being higher than the maternal PbB for infants delivered by caesarean section. Both the blood pressure and caesarean section associations were attenuated when the samples analysed later were omitted.
A few non-medical variables were associated with the outcome. Alcohol consumption in the second and third trimesters was associated with an OR of 7.7 (95% CI 2.4 to 24.4) for higher cord than maternal PbB; no association was seen for first trimester alcohol consumption. Children born in the winter had relatively higher cord PbB than maternal (season was not associated with the timing of lead determination).
Calcium intake and physical exertion were not associated with differences between maternal and cord PbB (table 1). Those with greater fetal PbB relative to maternal PbB did not differ with regard to race, parity, or smoking, nor did these variables confound any of the results.
Use of the ratio of maternal/cord PbB as an outcome measure yielded results similar to those of the difference between maternal and cord PbB (data not shown). Data were missing for 10 (6%) of the observations on at least one of the following: sickle cell trait, weight gain, alcohol use. For models of the cord-maternal difference in PbB, multiple imputation gave essentially identical beta estimates as models based on only the complete observations, except for Hb, which increased from −1.18 to −1.04 μg/dl; standard errors and p values were similarly close. Restriction of the analysis to those measurements greater than 1 μg/dl changed the beta estimates only in the second decimal place. Restriction of the model to those samples taken before delivery strengthened the sickle cell and delivery in winter associations (for the difference, from −0.76 to −0.94 and from 0.12 to 0.26, respectively; all other variables changed by less than 0.06).
DISCUSSION
This analysis looked at factors that might influence the dose of lead an infant receives, relative to maternal PbB. The results suggest that alcohol use late in pregnancy, maternal Hb during pregnancy, and blood pressure may explain some of the variability in cord PbB beyond that explained by the mother’s lead level.
Rothenberg’s group has studied the same issue in a more highly lead exposed population than ours.37,38 They found a decreased maternal/cord ratio associated with high blood pressure, caesarean delivery, parity, and increasing maternal age, and increased maternal/cord ratio with daily milk drinking and previous premature birth (Rothenberg et al, personal communication). We also found a relatively higher fetal PbB with increased blood pressure (among women over 30 years and with increasing weight gain), even though women with underlying hypertension were excluded from our study. Although the mechanism for the effect of blood pressure is not clear, lead has been associated with blood pressure in adults in several studies.53,54 Unlike previous studies, which have focused on lead as a predictor of cardiovascular health outcomes, in this study we were interested in the potential effects of blood pressure on lead levels as the outcome. Our results differ from those of Rothenberg et al with respect to caesarean section and parity. We saw no association with calcium intake, unlike Rothenberg and despite a previous article associating higher maternal PbB with lower calcium.40 It is possible that the effects of these factors are only apparent at high levels of exposure, or the methods of analysis gave rise to divergent findings (the structure of the statistical models is different).
One of the strongest associations in our data was with alcohol consumption reported at the second (late pregnancy) interview: higher alcohol use was associated with a greater cord PbB relative to maternal PbB. Alcohol has been shown to potentiate the effects of lead and to cause increased absorption by various organs in rats.55 Our results are consistent with the analyses of Ernhart and colleagues23 and Rabinowitz,22 but not with that of Rothenberg and colleagues.38 We do not know if the levels of alcohol consumption differed in the Mexico City women as compared with our study cohort.
We also saw an association with Hb, which may change the proportions of bound lead versus free plasma lead or correct for haemodilution. Similarly, sickle cell trait appears to reduce cord PbB, perhaps due to a different affinity for lead of sickle red blood cells, as compared with normal red blood cells (RBCs).56,57
Strengths of our study include detailed measurement of a large number of covariates and prospective measurements. Sensitivity analyses indicated the results were robust. For instance, at low levels of lead small measurement errors could have a large impact, but restriction of the model to only those women with lead higher than 1 μg/dl did not change the conclusions. Likewise, blood loss at delivery, fluid replacement, and stress conditions could affect maternal and fetal PbB concentrations, but restriction to the maternal blood samples taken before delivery did not change the overall conclusions. With regard to haemodilution, we controlled for Hb, and also note that adjustment for weight gain as a continuous or categorical variable did not modify the other results. Some data were missing, but imputation showed they had little effect. The examination of a large number of variables could have created spurious chance associations, but the similarity of effects estimated in three forms (linear difference, logistic, and exponential model of the ratio [not shown]) as well as their confirmation in other studies, argue that this is not the case. The lead measurements were not all analysed at the same lab, and some (40/451, 9%) of the stored samples that were not analysed had small clots, leading us to suspect the validity of those measurements. However, the effect estimates were not confounded by timing or location of laboratory analysis. Thus, the consistency of findings throughout these sensitivity analyses strengthens confidence in the associations.
The study population was predominantly young, low income, and urban, and was balanced between white and African-American women; the exclusion of women who were not in prenatal care by week 13 may limit generalisability. Women who had both cord and maternal lead measurements at delivery were different from other women in the broader study; they were of lower parity, higher income, and their babies were of higher birth weight. It is difficult to determine whether these differences are important or not. Labour progresses more rapidly for women of higher parity and delivery is quicker for low birth weight infants, who also have more complications. Therefore, lack of a cord blood sample could simply be a marker for either a quick delivery or a complicated birth, when the nurses might not have had time to collect the specimen.
Lead transfer has a greater potential impact in more highly exposed populations; our cohort had a low mean level, as is currently common in the USA (mean lead for this study ≈2 μg/dl, US mean for ages 20–49 = 2.1 μg/dl58). Despite the low concentrations, known risk factors for increased lead were easily identified, as we reported in previous work,40 indicating a high signal:noise ratio in the lead determinations. The consistency for many of our findings with other studies of more highly exposed populations provides reassurance that the associations are not artefacts. Also, the maternal-cord PbB association has been shown to be linear across a wide range of levels.16
Future studies should seek more refined methods of measuring placental transfer; differences between maternal and cord PbB are only partial measures of transfer. Any factor that caused changes in the maternal plasma-RBC-bone equilibrium or in excretion, resorption, or accumulation of lead in the fetus, or that affected placental transfer per se, could alter the difference between maternal and cord PbB. We had measurements in whole blood; plasma blood lead may be more predictive of cord blood lead.59 The δ-aminolevulinic acid dehydratase (ALA-D) genotype may influence lead susceptibility,60 and ALA-D activity is higher in cord than maternal blood.61 Also, knowledge of both the total Hb and the percentage of fetal versus adult Hb in the cord blood would have been valuable, since fetal Hb has a higher affinity for lead than does adult Hb62 and its proportion of the total varies across newborns. Notably, sudden infant death syndrome has been linked both to lead,63 as well as the percent adult haemoglobin in the newborn.64
In conclusion, this analysis suggests that sickle cell trait, alcohol use, and maternal blood pressure and haemoglobin, among other factors, influence lead transfer to the fetus. If corroborated, these findings could give additional impetus to efforts to control blood pressure (particularly in those over 30 years of age), encourage iron supplementation when appropriate, and reduce alcohol consumption during pregnancy. While the best way to reduce prenatal transmission is to reduce maternal exposure to lead, future research should also focus on how we can mitigate lead’s effects on development by reducing transfer to the infant.
Acknowledgments
This work was supported by grant R01-ES05738 from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences.
Emily Harville is a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Predoctoral Fellow.
REFERENCES
Footnotes
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Competing interests: none declared