Prenatal and childhood exposure to organophosphate pesticides and functional brain imaging in young adults

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Authors
Sagiv, Sharon K.
Baker, Joseph M.
Rauch, Stephen
Gao, Yuanyuan
Gunier, Robert B.
Mora, Ana M.
Kogut, Katherine
Bradman, Asa
Eskenazi, Brenda
Reiss, Allan L.
Advisors
Issue Date
2023-11-23
Type
Article
Keywords
Organophosphates , Dialkyl phosphates , Prenatal , Neurodevelopment , Neuroimaging , fNIRS
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Journal Issue
Citation
Sagiv, S. K., Baker, J. M., Rauch, S., Gao, Y., Gunier, R. B., Mora, A. M., Kogut, K., Bradman, A., Eskenazi, B., & Reiss, A. L. (2024). Prenatal and childhood exposure to organophosphate pesticides and functional brain imaging in young adults. Environmental Research, 242, 117756. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envres.2023.117756
Abstract

Background Early life exposure to organophosphate (OP) pesticides has been linked with poorer neurodevelopment from infancy to adolescence. In our Center for the Health Assessment of Mothers and Children of Salinas (CHAMACOS) birth cohort, we previously reported that residential proximity to OP use during pregnancy was associated with altered cortical activation using functional near infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) in a small subset (n = 95) of participants at age 16 years.

Methods We administered fNIRS to 291 CHAMACOS young adults at the 18-year visit. Using covariate-adjusted regression models, we estimated associations of prenatal and childhood urinary dialkylphosphates (DAPs), non-specific OP metabolites, with cortical activation in the frontal, temporal, and parietal regions of the brain during tasks of executive function and semantic language.

Results There were some suggestive associations for prenatal DAPs with altered activation patterns in both the inferior frontal and inferior parietal lobes of the left hemisphere during a task of cognitive flexibility (β per ten-fold increase in DAPs = 3.37; 95% CI: −0.02, 6.77 and β = 3.43; 95% CI: 0.64, 6.22, respectively) and the inferior and superior frontal pole/dorsolateral prefrontal cortex of the right hemisphere during the letter retrieval working memory task (β = −3.10; 95% CI: −6.43, 0.22 and β = −3.67; 95% CI: −7.94, 0.59, respectively). We did not observe alterations in cortical activation with prenatal DAPs during a semantic language task or with childhood DAPs during any task.

Discussion We observed associations of prenatal OP concentrations with mild alterations in cortical activation during tasks of executive function. Associations with childhood exposure were null. This is reasonably consistent with studies of prenatal OPs and neuropsychological measures of attention and executive function found in CHAMACOS and other birth cohorts.

Table of Contents
Description
Available online: 2023-11-23. Issue published: 2024-02-01.
Highlights •Early life organophosphate pesticide exposure linked to poorer neurodevelopment. •Neuroimaging can reveal structures and functions targeted by pesticide exposure. •Prenatal organophosphates associated with mild alterations in cortical activation. •Childhood organophosphates not associated with alterations in cortical activation.
Publisher
Elsevier Ltd
Journal
Environmental Research
Book Title
Series
PubMed ID
ISSN
0013-9351
1096-0953
EISSN