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| Ann Pediatr Endocrinol Metab > Volume 26(3); 2021 > Article |
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| Country | Study design | Subjects, n (age) | Exposure | Exposure periods (age) | Outcome (age) | Findings | Study | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Prenatal | ||||||||
| Sweden | Observational | 84,039 | NOx, O3, traffic density | Prenatal | T1DM incidence of offspring (8–14 years old) | O3 during the second trimester and NOx in the third trimester were associated with increased T1DM risk among offspring. | Malmqvist,[11] 2015 | |
| Canada | Cohort | 754,698 | NO2, O3, PM2.5 | Prenatal | Incidence of T1DM (up to 6 years old) | O3 exposure during the first trimester of pregnancy was associated with T1DM incidence (not NO2, PM2.5). | Elten, [12] 2020 | |
| Israel | Case-control | 362 T1DM patients vs. 3,512 controls | NO, NO2, O3, SO2, PM10, PM2.5 | Prenatal | T1DM incidence of offspring (0–18 years) | O3 during gestation was associated with the T1DM in offspring (not NO, NO2, SO2, PM10, PM2.5). | Taha- Khalde, [13] 2021 | |
| Postnatal | ||||||||
| Germany | Observational | 671 T1DM patients (0–20 years old) | NO2, PM10, PM2.5, PM2.5abs | NA | Age at onset of T1DM | Higher exposure to PM10 and NO2 accelerates the onset of T1DM in 0–4 years old children (not PM2.5, PM2.5abs). | Beyerlein, [14] 2015 | |
| Italy | Observational | 631,275 (0–14 years old) | NOx, O3, PM10, CO | 5-Year average levels | T1DM incidence | PM10 was associated with T1DM incidence rate (not O3, NOx, CO). | Di Ciaula, [15] 2016 | |
| Mean age at T1DM onset was positively associated with PM10 and inversely with O3. | ||||||||
| Germany | Observational | 6,807 T1DM patients (0–19 years old) | NO2, O3, PM10 | 5-Year average levels | Age at onset of T1DM | Not associated with mean age at diagnosis | Rosenbauer, [16] 2016 | |
| Germany | Cross-sectional | 771 T1DM patients (11–21 years old) | NO2, O3, PM10 | 5-Year average levels | HbA1c, daily insulin dose | No adverse effect on metabolic control | Tamayo, [17] 2016 | |
| Germany | Cross-sectional | 37,372 T1DM patients (0.5–20 years old) | NO2, O3, PM10 | 5-Year average levels | HbA1c, daily insulin dose | Inverse relationship between O3 and HbA1c (not NO2, PM10) | Lanzinger, [18] 2018 | |
| Canada | Cohort | 754,698 | NO2, O3, PM2.5 | Early childhood (0–5 years old) | Incidence of T1DM (up to 6 years old) | Not associated with T1DM incidence | Elten, [12] 2020 | |
| Poland | Observational | 947,362 (0–18 years old) | NO2, NOx, SO2, PM10abs, CO | 2-Year average levels | No. of new cases of T1DM | PM10abs, SO2, and CO were correlated with the number of new cases of T1DM (not NO2, NOx). | Michalska, [19] 2020 | |
T1DM, type 1 diabetes mellitus; NO2, nitrogen dioxide; PM10, particulate matter with an aerodynamic diameter of <10 μm; PM2.5, particulate matter with an aerodynamic diameter of <2.5 μm; PM2.5abs, absorbance of PM2.5; NA, not available; NOx, nitrogen oxide; O3, ozone; CO, carbon monoxide; HbA1c, hemoglobin A1c; SO2, sulfur dioxide; PM10abs, absorbance of PM10.
| Country | Study design | Subjects, n (age) | Exposure (average levels) | Exposure periods (age) | Outcome (age) | Findings | Study | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Prenatal | ||||||||
| USA | Cohort | 2,115 | PM2.5, BC, traffic density, roadway proximity | Third trimester | Birth weight, weight gain 6 months of age | BC exposure, roadway proximity and traffic density: associated with greater weight gain in infancy (not PM2.5) | Fleisch, [24] 2015 | |
| USA | Cohort | 1,418 | PM2.5, BC, traffic density, roadway proximity | Third trimester | BMI, WC, skinfold thickness, total and truncal fat mass | Not associated with childhood adiposity | Fleisch, [25] 2017 | |
| USA | Cohort | 1,446 | PM2.5 | Prenatal | Overweight or obesity (2-9 years old) | Increase the risk of childhood overweight or obesity | Mao, [26] 2017 | |
| USA | Cohort | 239 | PM2.5 | Prenatal | BMI, fat mass, WC, WHR, skinfold thickness (4 years old) | Higher PM2.5 exposure in mild-pregnancy was associated with increased fat mass and higher BMI among boys. | Chiu, [27] 2017 | |
| Higher PM2.5 exposure from early-to-mid pregnancy was associated with WHR among girls. | ||||||||
| USA | Cohort | 2,318 | NOx, PM2.5 | In utero | 4-Year BMI trajectory and BMI at 10 years old | Not associated with BMI at age 10 and the rate of growth over 4-year followup | Kim, [28] 2018 | |
| USA | Cohort | 1,649 | PM2.5, BC, traffic density | Prenatal | BMI trajectory (0.5–10 years old) | Not associated with childhood BMI trajectory | Fleisch, [29] 2018 | |
| Hong Kong | Cohort | 8,298 | NO, NO2, SO2, PM10, | In utero | BMI (9, 11, 13, and 15 years old) | Higher SO2 in utero was associated with lower BMI at 13 and 15 years | Huang, [30] 2019 | |
| Postnatal | ||||||||
| USA | Cohort | 2,889 (9-10 years old) | Traffic density | 8-Year average volume | BMI (18 years old) | Positive association with attained BMI at age 18 | Jerrett, [31] 2010 | |
| USA | Cohort | 4,550 (5-7 years old) | NOx, Traffic density | 1-Year average levels | BMI growth (10 years old) | NOx (nonfreeway) was associated with BMI at age 10 and the rate of growth over 5-year follow-up | Jerrett, [32] 2014 | |
| China | Cross-sectional | 30,056 | NO2, O3, SO2, PM10 | 3-Year average levels | Overweight and obesity (2–14 years old) | Positive association with overweight and obesity | Dong, [35] 2014 | |
| USA | Cohort | 3,318 (10 years old) | NOx | 8-Year average levels | BMI growth (18 years old) | Associated with an larger increase in BMI from age 10 to 18 and a higher attained BMI at age 18 | McConnell, [33] 2015 | |
| USA | Cohort | 1,418 | PM2.5, BC, traffic density, roadway proximity | At birth, early- and midchildhood (median 3.3 and 7.7 years of age) | BMI, WC, skinfold thickness, total and truncal fat mass | Roadway proximity at birth was associated with greater BMI, WC and skinfold thickness in early childhood and greater BMI, total and truncal fat mass in mid childhood (not traffic density BC, PM2.5). | Fleisch, [25] 2017 | |
| PM2.5 during the year prior to visit was negatively associated with BMI (not traffic density and BC). | ||||||||
| USA | Cohort | 1,446 | PM2.5 | During first 2-year of age | Overweight or obesity (2–9 years old) | Increase the risk of childhood overweight or obesity | Mao, [26] 2017 | |
| USA | Cross-sectional | 314 overweight or obese children (8-15 years old) | NO2, PM2.5 | 1-Year average levels prior to visit | BMI, SAAT and IAAT (at 18 years old) | Higher NO2 and PM2.5 were associated with higher BMI, body fat percent, and central adiposity. | Alderete, [34] 2017 | |
| USA | Cohort | 2,318 | NOx, PM2.5 | In infancy (<1) and childhood | 4-Year BMI trajectory and BMI at 10 years old | NOx exposure in infancy from freeway was associated with BMI at age 10 and the rate of growth over 4-year follow-up (not PM2.5) | Kim, [28] 2018 | |
| Italy | Cohort | 719 | NO2, NOx, PM10, PM2.5, PM2.5abs, PMcoarse, traffic density | At birth, 4 and 8 years old | BMI, WC, WHR (4 and 8 years old) | Not associated with obesityrelated parameters | Fioravanti, [42] 2018 | |
| Hong Kong | Cohort | 8,298 | NO, NO2, SO2, PM10 | In infancy and childhood | BMI (9, 11, 13, and 15 years old) | Higher SO2 in childhood were associated with lower BMI at 15 years. | Huang, [30] 2019 | |
| Higher NO2 childhood was associated with higher BMI at 9, 13, 15 years among boys. | ||||||||
| Netherlands | Cohort | 3,680 | NO2, PM10, PM2.5, PM2.5abs | 1-Year average levels of 3 periods of 2 weeks | Overweight (3–17 years old) | NO2 exposure increase the risk of being overweight (not PM2.5, PM10). | Bloemsma, [36] 2019 | |
| Spain | Cross-sectional | 2,660 (7-10 years old) | NO2, PM2.5, BC, Ultrafine particles | 1-Week level during warm and cold seasons | Overweight or obesity | Increase the risk of being overweight or obesity | De Bont, [37] 2019 | |
| China | Cross-sectional | 41,439 (6-17 years old) | PM2.5 | 5-Year average level | Obesity | Increase the risk of obesity | Guo, [38] 2020 | |
| China | Cross-sectional | 36,456 (9-17 years old) | NO2, O3, PM10, PM2.5 | 3-Year average levels | Obesity | Higher PM2.5, NO2, and O3 exposure increased the risk of being obesity (not PM10). | Zheng, [39] 2021 | |
| China | Cross-sectional | 44,718 (7-18 years old) | NO2, PM1, PM2.5, PM10 | 1-Year average level | BMI, WC, WHR, general and central obesity | Associated with obesityrelated parameters | Zhang, [40] 2021 | |
| Spain | Longitudinal | 416,955 | NO2, PM10, PM2.5 PMcoarse | 1-Year average level (2-5 years old) | Overweight or obesity (15 years old) | Increase the risk of developing overweight and obesity | De Bont, [41] 2021 | |
BMI, body mass index; NOx, nitrogen oxide; NO2, nitrogen dioxide; O3, ozone; SO2, sulfur dioxide; PM10, particulate matter with an aerodynamic diameter of <10 μm; PM2.5, particulate matter with an aerodynamic diameter of <2.5 μm; BC, black carbon; WC, waist circumference; SAAT, subcutaneous abdominal adipose tissue; IAAT, intra-abdominal adipose tissue; WHR, waist-to-hip ratio; PM2.5abs, absorbance of PM2.5; PMcoarse, coarse particles have an aerodynamic diameter ranging from 2.5 to 10 μm PM1, particulate matter with an aerodynamic diameter of <1 μm.
| Country | Study design | Subjects, n | Exposure (average levels) | Exposure periods (age) | Outcome (age) | Findings | Study | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Prenatal | ||||||||
| Belgium | Observational | 590 Mother-child pairs | NO2, PM10, PM2.5 | Prenatal | Cord plasma insulin level | Higher PM2.5 and PM10 was associated with increased cord plasma insulin levels (not NO2). | Madhloun, [48] 2017 | |
| Mexico | Observational | 365 Mother-child pairs | PM2.5 | From 4 weeks prior to LMP to 52 weeks after) | HbA1c (4–7 years old) | Associated with an annual increase in HbA1c in girls from age 4–5 years to 6–7 years. | Moody, [49] 2019 | |
| Denmark | Cohort | 629 | NO2 | Prenatal and postnatal (birth to age 7) | Fasting glucose, insulin, HOMA-IR (10–15 years old) | Inversely associated with fasting glucose, insulin, and HOMA-IR | Pedersen, [50] 2019 | |
| Postnatal | ||||||||
| Germany | Cross-sectional | 397 | NO2, PM10, PM2.5, PM2.5abs, roadway proximity | 1-Year average levels of 3 periods for 2 weeks | HOMA-IR (at 10 years old) | Exposure to NO2, PM10 and roadway proximity increase the HOMA-IR (not PM2.5, PM2.5abs). | Thiering, [51] 2013 | |
| Germanry | Cross-sectional | 837 | NO2, PM10, PM2.5, PM2.5abs | 3 to 5-year average level | HOMA-IR (at 15 years old) | Exposure to NO2, PM10 increase the HOMA-IR (not PM2.5, PM2.5abs). | Thiering, [52] 2016 | |
| USA | Cohort | 1,418 | PM2.5, BC, traffic density, roadway proximity | 3rd trimester, at birth, midchildhood (median 7.7 years of age) | HOMA-IR at midchildhood (median age 7.7 years) | PM2.5 exposure during the year prior to visit, traffic density and roadway proximity at birth were negatively associated with HOMA-IR. | Fleisch, [25] 2017 | |
| USA | Cohort | 314 Overweight or obese children | NO2, PM2.5 | 1-Year average level | Results of FSIVGTT test (during follow-up and at 18 years old) | Associated with a faster decline in insulin sensitivity and a lower insulin sensitivity at age 18 years | Alderete, [34] 2017 | |
| USA | Cross-sectional | 429 Overweight or obese children | NO2, NOx, O3, PM2.5 | 1-Year average level | Results of FSIVGTT test (8–18 years old) | PM2.5, NO2, and NOx was associated with higher fasting insulin, glucose, acute insulin response to glucose and lower insulin sensitivity (not O3). | Toledo-Corral, [53] 2018 | |
| USA | Prospective | 75 Obese adolescents | NO2, O3, PM2.5, roadway proximity | 2-Year average levels | HbA1c (postsurgery) | NO2 was associated with less improvement in HbA1c (not PM2.5). | Ghosh, [55] 2018 | |
| Denmark | Cohort | 629 | NO2 | Birth to age 7 | Fasting glucose, insulin, HOMA-IR (10–15 years old) | Inversely associated with fasting glucose, insulin, and HOMA-IR | Pedersen, [50] 2019 | |
| China | Cross-sectional | 9,897 | NO2, PM10, PM1, PM2.5 | 2-Year average levels | Fasting glucose (10–18 years old) | PM1 and NO2 exposures were associated with elevated fasting blood glucose (not PM10). | Zhang, [54] 2021 | |
NO2, nitrogen dioxide; PM10, particulate matter with an aerodynamic diameter of <10 μm; PM2.5, particulate matter with an aerodynamic diameter of <2.5 μm; PM2.5abs, absorbance of PM2.5; HOMA-IR, homeostatic model assessment for insulin resistance; PM1, particulate matter with an aerodynamic diameter of <1 μm; BC, black carbon; FSIVGTT, frequently sampled intravenous glucose tolerance test; O3, ozone; HbA1c, hemoglobin A1c; LMP, last menstrual period.
| Country | Study design | Subjects | Exposure | Exposure period | Outcome | Findings | Study | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Prenatal | ||||||||
| Belgium | Cohort | 499 Mother and newborn pairs | PM2.5 | Third trimester | TFT of mother and infant | Decrease in cord blood TSH level and cord blood fT4/fT3 ratio | Janssen, [60] 2017 | |
| USA | Cohort | 2050 Newborns | NO, NO2, O3, PM10, PM2.5 | Prenatal | Total T4 levels of newborn | PM2.5 and PM10 was associated with an increase in total T4 levels of heelstick blood spot (not NO, NO2, O3). | Howe, [61] 2018 | |
| China | Cohort | 443 Mother and newborn pairs | PM2.5 | First trimester | TFT of mother and infant | Not associated with neonatal TSH | Wang, [62] 2019 | |
| China | Cross-sectional | 15.1 Million newborns | PM10, PM2.5 | Prenatal | Congenital hypothyroidism | PM2.5 was associated with an increased risk of congenital hypothyroidism (not PM10). | Shang, [63] 2019 | |
| Country | Study design | Subjects (age) | Pollutants | Exposure periods (age) | Outcome (age) | Findings | Study | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Prenatal | ||||||||
| Hong Kong | Cohort | 1,938 Girls and 2,316 boys | NO, NO2, SO2, PM10 | In utero | Tanner stage (9–12 years old) | Higher PM10 exposure in utero and in infancy was associated with later pubertal development among girls. | Huang, [67] 2017 | |
| Higher SO2 and NO2 exposure in infancy and childhood were associated with later pubertal development among boys. | ||||||||
| Postnatal | ||||||||
| USA | Cohort | 437 Girls (6–8 years old) | Traffic density, roadway proximity | 9-Year annual average levels | Tanner stage (6–8 years old) | Associated with earlier onset (2–9 months) of pubic hair development (not breast development) | McGuinn, [68] 2016 | |
| Hong Kong | Cohort | 1,938 Girls and 2,316 boys | NO, NO2, SO2, PM10 | In infancy (<2 years) and in childhood (2-<8 years) | Tanner stage (9–12 years old) | Higher PM10 exposure in utero and in infancy was associated with later pubertal development among girls. | Huang, [67] 2017 | |
| Higher SO2 and NO2 exposure in infancy and childhood were associated with later pubertal development among boys. | ||||||||
| Korea | Cross-sectional | 639 Girls (13–17 years old) | PM10 | 1 to 3-year annual average level | Age at menarche | Associated with earlier onset of age at menarche | Jung, [69] 2018 | |
| German | Cohort | 943 Girls and 1,002 boys | NO2, O3, PM10, PM2.5 | 5-Year annual average levels | Serum estradiol and testosterone levels (at 10 years old) | Not associated with pubertal development defined by levels of estradiol and testosterone | Zhao, [70] 2021 | |

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