Associations Between Prenatal Blood Metals and Vitamins and Cord Blood Peptide Hormone Concentrations.

View Abstract

BACKGROUND

Nonessential metals have endocrine disrupting properties, interfere with cellular processes, generate reactive oxygen and deplete antioxidants, while essential metals and vitamins act as antioxidants. The extent to which prenatal metals and vitamins are associated with cord blood hormones involved in maternal and fetal metabolic and growth processes is unknown.

METHODS

We measured six nonessential (arsenic, barium, cadmium, cesium, lead, mercury) and four essential (magnesium, manganese, selenium, zinc) metals and trace elements, and two vitamins (B12 and folate) in first trimester blood from participants in the longitudinal pre-birth Project Viva cohort, who were recruited between 1999-2002 in eastern Massachusetts. We measured adiponectin, C-peptide, IGF-1, IGF-2, IGFBP-3, insulin, and leptin concentrations in cord blood (~=695). We used covariate-adjusted quantile g-computation for mixtures and linear regression for individual exposures to estimate associations with cord blood peptide hormones.

RESULTS

The essential metal mixture (magnesium, manganese, selenium, zinc) was associated with higher IGF-1 (β=3.20 ng/ml per quartile, 95% CI: 0.39, 6.01), IGF-2 (β=10.93 ng/ml, 95% CI: 0.08, 21.79), and leptin (β=1.03 ng/ml, 95% CI: 0.25, 1.80). Magnesium was associated with higher leptin (β=2.90 ng/ml, 95% CI: 0.89, 4.91), while B12 was associated with lower adiponectin, IGF-2, and leptin, but higher C-peptide. Other individual nonessential metals were associated with cord blood hormones.

CONCLUSIONS

Our findings suggest that some prenatal metals and vitamins are associated with cord blood hormones, which may influence growth and development.

Abbreviation
Glob Reprod Health
Publication Date
2023-10-19
Volume
7
Issue
6
Pubmed ID
38645676
Medium
Print-Electronic
Full Title
Associations Between Prenatal Blood Metals and Vitamins and Cord Blood Peptide Hormone Concentrations.
Authors
Smith AR, Lin PD, Rifas-Shiman SL, Switkowski KM, Fleisch AF, Wright RO, Coull B, Oken E, Hivert MF, Cardenas A