Vytautas Magnus University Research Management System (VDU CRIS)





4. Universiteto autorių publikacijos kituose leidiniuose / Publications by University authors in external publications

Permanent URI for this communityhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12259/1176

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  • research article[2021][S1][N012][15]
    Vrijheid, Martine
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    Basagaña, Xavier
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    Gonzalez, Juan R.
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    Jaddoe, Vincent W. V.
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    Jensen, Genon
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    Keun, Hector C.
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    McEachan, Rosemary R. C.
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    Porcel, Joana
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    Siroux, Valérie
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    Swertz, Morris A.
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    Thomsen, Cathrine
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    Aasvang, Gunn Marit
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    Angeli, Karine
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    Avraam, Demetris
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    Ballester, Ferran
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    Burton, Paulo
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    Bustamante, Mariona
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    Casas, Maribel
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    Chatzi, Leda
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    Chevrier, Cecile
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    Cingotti, Natacha
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    Conti, David
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    Crépet, Amélien
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    Dadvand, Payama
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    Duijts, Liesbeth
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    Enckevort, Estherj, van
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    Esplugues, Ana
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    Fossati, Serena
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    Garlantezec, Ronant
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    Roig, María Dolores Gómez
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    Gutzkow, Kristine B.
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    Guxens, Mònica
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    Haakma, Sido
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    Hessel, Ellen V. S.
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    Hoyles, Lesley
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    Hyde, Eleanor
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    Klanova, Jana
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    Klaveren, Jacob D. van
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    Kortenkamp, Andrea
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    Brusquet, Laurent, le
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    Leenen, Ivonne
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    Lertxundi, Aitana
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    Lertxundi, Neread
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    Lionis, Christos
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    Llop, Sabrin
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    Lopez-Espinosa, Maria-Jose
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    Lyon-Caen, Sarah
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    Maitre, Léa
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    Mason, Dan
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    Mathy, Sandrine
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    Mazarico, Edurne
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    Nawrot, Tim S.
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    Nieuwenhuijsen, Mark
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    Ortiz, Rodney
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    Pedersen, Marie
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    Perelló, Josep
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    Pérez-Cruz, Miriam
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    Claire, Philippat
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    Piler, Pavel
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    Pizzi, Costanza
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    Quentin, Joane
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    Lorenzo, Richiardi
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    Rodriguez, Adrian
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    Roumeliotaki, Theano
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    Capote, Jose Manuel Sabin
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    Santiago, Leonardo
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    Santos, Susana
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    Siskos, Alexandros P.
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    Strandberg-Larsen, Katrine
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    Stratakis, Nikos
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    Sunyer, Jordi
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    Tenenhaus, Arthur
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    Vafeiadi, Marina
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    Wilson, Rebecca C.
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    Wright, John
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    Yang, Tiffany C.
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    Slama, Rémy
    Environmental epidemiology. Philadelphia, PA: Wolters Kluwer, 2021, vol. 5, iss. 5, p. 1-15

    Early life stages are vulnerable to environmental hazards and present important windows of opportunity for lifelong disease prevention. This makes early life a relevant starting point for exposome studies. The Advancing Tools for Human Early Lifecourse Exposome Research and Translation (ATHLETE) project aims to develop a toolbox of exposome tools and a Europe-wide exposome cohort that will be used to systematically quantify the effects of a wide range of community- and individual-level environmental risk factors on mental, cardiometabolic, and respiratory health outcomes and associated biological pathways, longitudinally from early pregnancy through to adolescence. Exposome tool and data development include as follows: (1) a findable, accessible, interoperable, reusable (FAIR) data infrastructure for early life exposome cohort data, including 16 prospective birth cohorts in 11 European countries; (2) targeted and nontargeted approaches to measure a wide range of environmental exposures (urban, chemical, physical, behavioral, social); (3) advanced statistical and toxicological strategies to analyze complex multidimensional exposome data; (4) estimation of associations between the exposome and early organ development, health trajectories, and biological (metagenomic, metabolomic, epigenetic, aging, and stress) pathways; (5) intervention strategies to improve early life urban and chemical exposomes, co-produced with local communities; and (6) child health impacts and associated costs related to the exposome. Data, tools, and results will be assembled in an openly accessible toolbox, which will provide great opportunities for researchers, policymakers, and other stakeholders, beyond the duration of the project. ATHLETE’s results will help to better understand and prevent health damage from environmental exposures and their mixtures from the earliest parts of the life course onward.

      11  35Scopus© Citations 53WOS© Citations 37
  • research article[2021][S1][N012][12]
    Maitre, Léa
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    Julvez, Jordi
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    Lopez-Vicente, Monica
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    Warembourg, Charline
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    Tamayo-Uria, Ibon
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    Philippat, Claire
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    Gutzkow, Kristine B.
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    Guxens, Monica
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    Basagaña, Xavier
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    Casas, Maribel
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    Castro, Montserrat de
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    Chatzi, Leda
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    Evandt, Jorunn
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    Gonzalez, Juan R.
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    Haug, Line Småstuen
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    Heude, Barbara
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    Hernandez-Ferrer, Carles
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    Kampouri, Mariza
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    Manson, Dan
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    Marquez, Sandra
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    McEachan, Rosemary R. C.
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    Nieuwenhuijsen, Mark
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    Robinson, Oliver
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    Slama, Rémy
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    Thomsen, Cathrine
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    Urquiza, Jose
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    Vafeiadi, Marina
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    Wright, John
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    Vrijheid, Martine
    Environment international. Oxford: Elsevier B.V., 2021, vol. 153, p. 1-12

    Background: Environmental exposures in early life influence the development of behavioral outcomes in children, but research has not considered multiple exposures. We therefore aimed to investigate the impact of a broad spectrum of pre- and postnatal environmental exposures on child behavior. Methods and findings: We used data from the HELIX (Human Early Life Exposome) project, which was based on six longitudinal population-based birth cohorts in Europe. At 6–11 years, children underwent a follow-up to char-acterize their exposures and assess behavioral problems. We measured 88 prenatal and 123 childhood envi-ronmental factors, including outdoor, indoor, chemical, lifestyle and social exposures. Parent-reported behavioral problems included (1) internalizing, (2) externalizing scores, using the child behavior checklist (CBCL), and (3) the Conner’s Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) index, all outcomes being discrete raw counts. We applied LASSO penalized negative binomial regression models to identify which exposures were associated with the outcomes, while adjusting for co-exposures. In the 1287 children (mean age 8.0 years), 7.3% had a neuropsychiatric medical diagnosis according to parent’s reports. During pregnancy, smoking and car traffic showing the strongest associations (e.g. smoking with ADHD index, aMR:1.31 [1.09; 1.59]) among the 13 exposures selected by LASSO, for at least one of the outcomes. During childhood, longer sleep duration, healthy diet and higher family social capital were associated with reduced scores whereas higher exposure to lead, copper, indoor air pollution, unhealthy diet were associated with increased scores. Unexpected decreases in behavioral scores were found with polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and organophosphate (OP) pesticides. [...]

      35  28WOS© Citations 89Scopus© Citations 96
  • research article[2021][S1][N012][11]
    Julvez, Jordi
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    Julvez, Jordi
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    Warembourg, Charline
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    Maitre, Léa
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    Philippat, Claire
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    Gutzkow, Kristine B.
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    Guxens, Monica
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    Evandt, Jorunn
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    Burgaleta, Miguel
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    Casas, Maribel
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    Chatzi, Leda
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    Castro, Montserrat de
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    Donaire-Gonzalez, David
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    Hernandez-Ferrer, Carles
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    Heude, Barbara
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    McEachan, Rosemary R. C.
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    Mon-Williams, Mark
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    Nieuwenhuijsen, Mark
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    Robinson, Oliver
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    Sakhi, Amrit K.
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    Sebastian-Galles, Nuria
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    Slama, Rémy
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    Sunyer, Jordi
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    Tamayo-Uria, Ibon
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    Thomsen, Cathrine
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    Urquiza, Jose
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    Vafeiadi, Marina
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    Wright, John
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    Basagaña, Xavier
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    Vrijheid, Martine
    Environmental pollution. Oxford : Elsevier, 2021, Vol. 284, p. 1-11

    Epidemiological studies mostly focus on single environmental exposures. This study aims to systematically assess associations between a wide range of prenatal and childhood environmental exposures and cognition. The study sample included data of 1298 mother-child pairs, children were 6–11 years-old, from six European birth cohorts. We measured 87 exposures during pregnancy and 122 cross-sectionally during childhood, including air pollu-tion, built environment, meteorology, natural spaces, traffic, noise, chemicals and life styles. The measured cognitive domains were fluid intelligence (Raven’s Coloured Progressive Matrices test, CPM), attention (Atten-tion Network Test, ANT) and working memory (N-Back task). We used two statistical approaches to assess as-sociations between exposure and child cognition: the exposome-wide association study (ExWAS) considering each exposure independently, and the deletion-substitution-addition algorithm (DSA) considering all exposures simultaneously to build a final multiexposure model. Based on this multiexposure model that included the exposure variables selected by ExWAS and DSA models, child organic food intake was associated with higher fluid intelligence (CPM) scores (beta =1.18; 95% CI =0.50, 1.87) and higher working memory (N-Back) scores (0.23; 0.05, 0.41), and child fast food intake [...]

      10  23Scopus© Citations 67WOS© Citations 61
  • research article[2019][S1][N012][12]
    Tamayo-Uria, Ibon
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    Maitre, Léa
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    Thomsen, Cathrine
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    Nieuwenhuijsen, Mark
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    Chatzi, Leda
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    Siroux, Valérie
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    Aasvang, Gunn Marit
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    Agier, Lydiane
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    Casas, Maribel
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    Castro, Montserrat de
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    Haug, Line Småstuen
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    Heude, Barbara
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    Gützkow, Kristine Bjerve
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    Krog, Norun Hjertager
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    Mason, Dan
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    McEachan, Rosemary R. C.
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    Meltzer, Helle Margrete
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    Robinson, Oliver
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    Roumeliotaki, Theano
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    Sakhi, Amrit K.
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    Urquiza, Jose
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    Vafeiadi, Marina
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    Waiblinger, Dagmar
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    Warembourg, Charline
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    Wright, John
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    Slama, Rémy
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    Vrijheid, Martine
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    Basagaña, Xavier
    Environment international, 2019, p. 189-200

    Characterization of the “exposome”, the set of all environmental factors that one is exposed to from conception onwards, has been advocated to better understand the role of environmental factors on chronic diseases. Here, we aimed to describe the early-life exposome. Specifically, we focused on the correlations between multiple environmental exposures, their patterns and their variability across European regions and across time (pregnancy and childhood periods). We relied on the Human Early-Life Exposome (HELIX) project, in which 87 environmental exposures during pregnancy and 122 during the childhood period (grouped in 19 exposure groups) were assessed in 1301 pregnant mothers and their children at 6–11 years in 6 European birth cohorts. Some correlations between exposures in the same exposure group reached high values above 0.8. The median correlation within exposure groups was >0.3 for many exposure groups, reaching 0.69 for water disinfection by products in pregnancy and 0.67 for the meteorological group in childhood. Median correlations between different exposure groups rarely reached 0.3. Some correlations were driven by cohort-level associations (e.g. air pollution and chemicals). Ten principal components explained 45% and 39% of the total variance in the pregnancy and childhood exposome, respectively, while 65 and 90 components were required to explain 95% of the exposome variability. Correlations between maternal (pregnancy) and childhood exposures were high (>0.6) for most exposures modeled at the residential address (e.g. air pollution), but were much lower and even close to zero for some chemical exposures.[...]

      18  139Scopus© Citations 106WOS© Citations 100
  • research article[2018][S1][N012][13]
    Haug, Line Småstuen
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    Sakhi, Amrit K.
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    Cequier, Enrique
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    Casas, Maribel
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    Maitre, Léa
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    Basagaña, Xavier
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    Chalkiadaki, Georgia
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    Chatzi, Leda
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    Coen, Muireann
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    Bont, Jeroen de
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    Ferrand, Joane
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    Gonzalez, Juan R.
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    Gützkow, Kristine Bjerve
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    Keun, Hector C.
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    McEachan, Rosie
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    Meltzer, Helle Margrete
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    Robinson, Oliver
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    Saulnier, Pierre-Jean
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    Slama, Rémy
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    Sunyer, Jordi
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    Urquiza, Jose
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    Vafeiadi, Marina
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    Wright, John
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    Vrijheid, Martine
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    Thomsen, Cathrine
    Environment international. Amsterdam : Elsevier B.V., 2018, vol. 121, p. 751-763

    Background: Harmonized data describing simultaneous exposure to a large number of environmental contaminants in-utero and during childhood is currently very limited. Objectives: To characterize concentrations of a large number of environmental contaminants in pregnant women from Europe and their children, based on chemical analysis of biological samples from mother-child pairs. Methods: We relied on the Early-Life Exposome project, HELIX, a collaborative project across six established population-based birth cohort studies in Europe. In 1301 subjects, biomarkers of exposure to 45 contaminants (i.e. organochlorine compounds, polybrominated diphenyl ethers, per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, toxic and essential elements, phthalate metabolites, environmental phenols, organophosphate pesticide metabolites and cotinine) were measured in biological samples from children (6–12 years) and their mothers during pregnancy, using highly sensitive biomonitoring methods. Results: Most of the exposure biomarkers had high detection frequencies in mothers (35 out of 45 biomarkers with > 90% detected) and children (33 out of 45 biomarkers with > 90% detected). Concentrations were significantly different between cohorts for all compounds, and were generally higher in maternal compared to children samples. For most of the persistent compounds the correlations between maternal and child concentrations were moderate to high (Spearman Rho > 0.35), while for most non-persistent compounds correlations were considerably lower (Spearman Rho < 0.15). For mercury, PFOS and PFOA a considerable proportion of the samples of both mothers and their children exceeded the HBM I value established by The Human Biomonitoring Commission of the German Federal Environment Agency. [...]

      47  143Scopus© Citations 148WOS© Citations 146