TY - JOUR
T1 - Dioxins and furans maternal transfer
T2 - A study of breast milk and cord serum levels among Lebanese mothers and associations with newborn anthropometric measurements
AU - Mahfouz, Yara
AU - Harmouche-Karaki, Mireille
AU - Matta, Joseph
AU - Mahfouz, Maya
AU - Salameh, Pascale
AU - Younes, Hassan
AU - Helou, Khalil
AU - Finan, Ramzi
AU - Abi-Tayeh, Georges
AU - Meslimani, Mohamad
AU - Moussa, Ghada
AU - Chahrour, Nada
AU - Osseiran, Camille
AU - Skaiki, Farouk
AU - Narbonne, Jean François
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2024/2
Y1 - 2024/2
N2 - Dioxins and furans (PCDD/Fs) are anthropogenic pollutants that persist in the environment for long years, bioaccumulating in food & contaminating humans. In pregnancy, they can transfer through the placenta and reach the fetus, which negatively affects fetal growth. They can also reach newborns through breastfeeding. In this study, we focused on this critical subpopulation and identified the presence of PCDD/Fs among pregnant women in breast milk (n = 41) and cord serum (n = 49); we assessed the correlation between different matrices, evaluated the predictors and associations with newborn anthropometric measurements. Over 70.7 % of PCDD/Fs were detected in breast milk and 46.9–55.1 % in cord serum. Cord/maternal serum and breast milk to maternal serum ratios were > 1 with a significant positive Spearman correlation (0.669–0.729). Breast milk & maternal serum PCDD/Fs were associated inversely with age and positively with red meat intake. Cord serum PCDD/Fs were inversely associated with pre-pregnancy weight loss and passive smoking. Parity and gestational weight gain showed positive associations with Z-scores at birth. Z-score differences showed negative and positive associations with passive smoking and pre-pregnancy BMI respectively.
AB - Dioxins and furans (PCDD/Fs) are anthropogenic pollutants that persist in the environment for long years, bioaccumulating in food & contaminating humans. In pregnancy, they can transfer through the placenta and reach the fetus, which negatively affects fetal growth. They can also reach newborns through breastfeeding. In this study, we focused on this critical subpopulation and identified the presence of PCDD/Fs among pregnant women in breast milk (n = 41) and cord serum (n = 49); we assessed the correlation between different matrices, evaluated the predictors and associations with newborn anthropometric measurements. Over 70.7 % of PCDD/Fs were detected in breast milk and 46.9–55.1 % in cord serum. Cord/maternal serum and breast milk to maternal serum ratios were > 1 with a significant positive Spearman correlation (0.669–0.729). Breast milk & maternal serum PCDD/Fs were associated inversely with age and positively with red meat intake. Cord serum PCDD/Fs were inversely associated with pre-pregnancy weight loss and passive smoking. Parity and gestational weight gain showed positive associations with Z-scores at birth. Z-score differences showed negative and positive associations with passive smoking and pre-pregnancy BMI respectively.
KW - Cord serum
KW - Exposure predictors
KW - Human biomonitoring
KW - Human milk
KW - Newborn anthropometry
KW - Persistent organic pollutants
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85183559393&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.marpolbul.2024.116032
DO - 10.1016/j.marpolbul.2024.116032
M3 - Article
C2 - 38237247
AN - SCOPUS:85183559393
SN - 0025-326X
VL - 199
JO - Marine Pollution Bulletin
JF - Marine Pollution Bulletin
M1 - 116032
ER -