Health & Environmental Research Online (HERO)


Print Feedback Export to File
4619944 
Journal Article 
Prenatal exposure to perfluoroalkyl substances: Infant birth weight and early life growth 
Shoaff, J; Papandonatos, GD; Calafat, AM; Chen, A; Lanphear, BP; Ehrlich, S; Kelsey, KT; Braun, JM 
2018 
Yes 
Environmental Epidemiology
EISSN: 2474-7882 
e010 
English 
is supplemented by 6590954 [Email to Michael Wright in response to a question about Shoaff et al. 2018]
Background: Prenatal perfluoroalkyl substance (PFAS) exposure has been associated with reduced birth weight and excess child adiposity, but the relationship between PFAS and early life growth is unknown.

Objective: To determine if prenatal PFAS exposure was associated with birth weight, body composition, and growth until 2 years of age.

Methods: In a prospective cohort of women and their children from Cincinnati, OH, we quantified perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA), perfluorooctane sulfonic acid (PFOS), perfluorononanoic acid (PFNA), and perfluorohexane sulfonic acid (PFHxS) in pregnant women’s serum. We used linear regression to estimate associations of PFAS with birth weight z-scores (n = 345) and linear mixed models to estimate associations with repeated weight and length/height measurements (n = 334) at 4 weeks and 1 and 2 years of age, after adjusting for sociodemographic, perinatal, nutritional, and environmental factors.

Results: We found nonsignificant inverse associations between PFAS and infant birth weight. For example, each log2 increase in PFOA was associated with a 0.03 SD reduction in birth weight z-score (95% confidence interval [CI] = −0.17, 0.10). Compared to associations with birth weight, we observed stronger associations between PFAS and child anthropometry from 4 weeks to 2 years. For instance, each log2 increase in PFOA was associated with a 0.12 SD decrease in BMI z-score (95% CI = −0.25, 0.01). We did not observe any differences in growth rate associated with PFAS.

Conclusions: We observed inverse associations between prenatal serum PFAS concentrations and anthropometry until 2 years of age. Prenatal serum PFAS concentrations were not associated with growth rate in the first 2 years of life. 
PFAS
• Additional PFAS (formerly XAgency)
     Literature Search November 2019
          Other Sources
               Reference list review of included studies
               TEDX
     Screened Studies
          Excluded
               Exclude (TIAB)
• Expanded PFAS SEM (formerly PFAS 430)
     Litsearch: September 2019
          PubMed
          Other Sources
               PFAS TOX Database
     Screened Studies
          Excluded
               Exclude (TIAB)
     Not prioritized for screening
     Perfluorooctane
• PFAS 150
     Literature Search Update December 2020
          PubMed
     Literature Search August 2019
          PubMed
          Other sources
               Reference list review of included studies
               PFAS TOX Database
     Not prioritized for screening
     Ammonium perfluorooctanoate
     Perfluorohexanesulfonic acid
     Perfluorononanoic acid
     Perfluorooctane
     Perfluorooctanesulfonic acid
     Perfluorooctanoic acid
• PFHxS
     Database searches
          Pubmed
          Pelch PFAS SEM
     Inclusion
          TiAb
          Full Text
               Human Study
• PFNA
     Literature Search
          Pubmed
          Toxline
     PFNA May 2019 Update
          Pubmed
          Toxnet
     Title and Abstract Screening
          Full Text Screening
               Studies Meeting PECO
                    Human health effects studies
     June 2022 Pelch Database
• PFOA (335-67-1) and PFOS (1763-23-1)
     Literature Search Update (2013-2019)
          PubMed
• PFOA and PFOS OW MCLG Approaches
     Cited in White Papers