PRENATAL EXPOSURE TO COMMON HOUSEHOLD CHEMICALS LINKED WITH SUBSTANTIAL DROP IN CHILD IQ
Children exposed
during pregnancy to elevated levels of two common chemicals found in the
home--di-n-butyl phthalate (DnBP) and di-isobutyl phthalate (DiBP)--had an IQ
score, on average, more than six points lower than children exposed at lower
levels, according to researchers at Columbia University's Mailman School of
Public Health.
The study is the first
to report a link between prenatal exposure to phthalates and IQ in school-age
children. Results appear online in the journal PLOS ONE.
DnBP and DiBP are
found in a wide variety of consumer products, from dryer sheets to vinyl
fabrics to personal care products like lipstick, hairspray, and nail polish,
even some soaps. Since 2009, several phthalates have been banned from
children's toys and other childcare articles in the United States. However, no
steps have been taken to protect the developing fetus by alerting pregnant
women to potential exposures. In the U.S., phthalates are rarely listed as
ingredients on products in which they are used.
Researchers followed
328 New York City women and their children from low-income communities. They
assessed the women's exposure to four phthalates--DnBP, DiBP, di-2-ethylhexyl
phthalate, and diethyl phthalate--in the third trimester of pregnancy by
measuring levels of the chemicals' metabolites in urine. Children were given IQ
tests at age 7.
Children of mothers
exposed during pregnancy to the highest 25 percent of concentrations of DnBP
and DiBP had IQs 6.6 and 7.6 points lower, respectively, than children of
mothers exposed to the lowest 25 percent of concentrations after controlling
for factors like maternal IQ, maternal education, and quality of the home
environment that are known to influence child IQ scores. The association was
also seen for specific aspects of IQ, such as perceptual reasoning, working
memory, and processing speed. The researchers found no associations between the
other two phthalates and child IQ.
The range of phthalate
metabolite exposures measured in the mothers was not unusual: it was within
what the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention observed in a national
sample.
"Pregnant women
across the United States are exposed to phthalates almost daily, many at levels
similar to those that we found were associated with substantial reductions in
the IQ of children," says lead author Pam Factor-Litvak, PhD, associate
professor of Epidemiology at the Mailman School.
"The magnitude of
these IQ differences is troubling," says senior author Robin Whyatt, DrPH,
Professor of Environmental Health Sciences and deputy director of the Columbia
Center for Children's Environmental Health at the Mailman School. "A six-
or seven-point decline in IQ may have substantial consequences for academic achievement
and occupational potential."
"While there has
been some regulation to ban phthalates from toys of young children," adds
Dr. Factor-Litvak, "there is no legislation governing exposure during
pregnancy, which is likely the most sensitive period for brain development.
Indeed, phthalates are not required to be on product labeling."
While avoiding all
phthalates in the United States is for now impossible, the researchers
recommend that pregnant women take steps to limit exposure by not microwaving
food in plastics, avoiding scented products as much as possible, including air
fresheners, and dryer sheets, and not using recyclable plastics labeled as 3,
6, or 7.
The findings build on
earlier, similar observations by the researchers of associations between
prenatal exposure to DnBP and DiBP and children's cognitive and motor
development and behavior at age 3. This September, they reported a link between
prenatal exposure to phthalates and risk for childhood asthma.
It's not known how
phthalates affect child health. However, numerous studies show that they
disrupt the actions of hormones, including testosterone and thyroid hormone.
Inflammation and oxidative stress may also play a role.
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