Prenatal exposure to low-level polychlorinated biphenyls in relation to mental and motor development at 8 months.

The relation between exposure to low levels of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), a class of persistent organic pollutants, and cognitive and motor development in young children has been examined in several studies, and results have varied. The authors evaluated the association between prenatal exposure to PCBs and children's neurodevelopment using data from the Collaborative Perinatal Project. Pregnant women were enrolled from 1959 to 1965 from 12 sites across the United States. PCBs were measured in maternal serum taken during pregnancy. To measure children's mental and psychomotor development at 8 months of age, the authors administered the Bayley Scales of Infant Development (means, 87 (standard deviation, 15) and 88 (standard deviation, 18), respectively). Overall, they did not observe a relation between prenatal PCB exposure and children's mental or psychomotor scores (n = 1,207; multivariate adjusted beta = 0.1 point per micro g/liter increase of PCB, p = 0.71, and beta = 0.5, p = 0.14, respectively). The PCB-psychomotor score relation varied by study center (p < 0.05): The association was direct in some centers, inverse in others. This could not be attributed to variation in the timing or measurement of the child's neurodevelopment or analysis of PCBs because these were standardized across centers. The reasons for variation in results within this study and across other studies remain unclear.

[1]  Philippe Grandjean,et al.  Comparison of polychlorinated biphenyl levels across studies of human neurodevelopment. , 2003, Environmental health perspectives.

[2]  Haibo Zhou,et al.  A Semiparametric Empirical Likelihood Method for Data from an Outcome‐Dependent Sampling Scheme with a Continuous Outcome , 2002, Biometrics.

[3]  B. Heinzow,et al.  Environmental exposure to polychlorinated biphenyls and quality of the home environment: effects on psychodevelopment in early childhood , 2001, The Lancet.

[4]  J. Samsom,et al.  Study of a Group of Extremely Preterm Infants (25—27 Weeks) , 2001, Journal of child neurology.

[5]  C M Rutter,et al.  A hierarchical regression approach to meta‐analysis of diagnostic test accuracy evaluations , 2001, Statistics in medicine.

[6]  A Whitehead,et al.  Meta‐analysis of continuous outcome data from individual patients , 2001, Statistics in medicine.

[7]  T. Lai,et al.  Effect of prenatal exposure to polychlorinated biphenyls on cognitive development in children: a longitudinal study in Taiwan. , 2001, The British journal of psychiatry. Supplement.

[8]  P. Stewart,et al.  Prenatal exposure to PCBs and infant performance on the fagan test of infant intelligence. , 2000, Neurotoxicology.

[9]  M. Longnecker,et al.  Serial levels of serum organochlorines during pregnancy and postpartum. , 1999, Archives of environmental health.

[10]  W. Willett,et al.  Predictors of plasma concentrations of DDE and PCBs in a group of U.S. women. , 1998, Environmental health perspectives.

[11]  B. Heinzow,et al.  Developmental neurotoxicity of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBS): cognitive and psychomotor functions in 7-month old children. , 1998, Toxicology letters.

[12]  P J Bushnell,et al.  Neurotoxicity of environmental chemicals and their mechanism of action. , 1998, Toxicology letters.

[13]  S. Landry,et al.  Effects of medical risk and socioeconomic status on the rate of change in cognitive and social development for low birth weight children. , 1997, Journal of clinical and experimental neuropsychology.

[14]  M. Longnecker,et al.  The human health effects of DDT (dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane) and PCBS (polychlorinated biphenyls) and an overview of organochlorines in public health. , 1997, Annual review of public health.

[15]  C. C. Hodge,et al.  An improved analysis for chlorinated pesticides and polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) in human and bovine sera using solid-phase extraction. , 1996, Journal of analytical toxicology.

[16]  J. Jacobson,et al.  Sources and implications of interstudy and interindividual variability in the developmental neurotoxicity of PCBs. , 1996, Neurotoxicology and teratology.

[17]  S. Schantz Developmental neurotoxicity of PCBs in humans: what do we know and where do we go from here? , 1996, Neurotoxicology and teratology.

[18]  C. Koopman‐Esseboom,et al.  Effects of polychlorinated biphenyl/dioxin exposure and feeding type on infants' mental and psychomotor development. , 1996, Pediatrics.

[19]  W. Shain,et al.  Neurotoxicity of polychlorinated biphenyls: structure-activity relationship of individual congeners. , 1991, Toxicology and applied pharmacology.

[20]  B C Gladen,et al.  PCBs, DDE, and child development at 18 and 24 months. , 1991, Annals of epidemiology.

[21]  Hiram E. Fitzgerald,et al.  Theory and Research in Behavioral Pediatrics , 1991, Springer US.

[22]  W. Shain,et al.  Lightly chlorinated ortho-substituted PCB congeners decrease dopamine in nonhuman primate brain and in tissue culture. , 1990, Toxicology and applied pharmacology.

[23]  B C Gladen,et al.  Development after exposure to polychlorinated biphenyls and dichlorodiphenyl dichloroethene transplacentally and through human milk. , 1988, The Journal of pediatrics.

[24]  J S Taylor,et al.  Congenital poisoning by polychlorinated biphenyls and their contaminants in Taiwan. , 1988, Science.

[25]  B. Vohr,et al.  Maternal and Environmental Factors Affecting Developmental Outcome of Infants of Adolescent Mothers , 1986, Journal of developmental and behavioral pediatrics : JDBP.

[26]  B C Gladen,et al.  Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and dichlorodiphenyl dichloroethene (DDE) in human milk: effects of maternal factors and previous lactation. , 1986, American journal of public health.

[27]  J. Jacobson,et al.  Environmental Toxins and Infant Development , 1986 .

[28]  R. Bowman,et al.  Locomotor hyperactivity in PCB-exposed rhesus monkeys. , 1981, Neurotoxicology.

[29]  S. Broman,et al.  Familial Resemblance in Infant Mental Development. , 1974 .

[30]  A. C. Drogendijk,et al.  The women and their pregnancies: K. R. Niswander and M. Gordon (eds.) W. B. Saunders Comp., Philadelphia — London — Toronto, 1972 (540 pp., over 400 charts) £ 7.25; US $ 17 , 1973 .

[31]  N. Bayley Manual for the Bayley Scales of Infant Development , 1969 .

[32]  D. Horvitz,et al.  A Generalization of Sampling Without Replacement from a Finite Universe , 1952 .