Impacts of heat exposure in utero on long-term health and social outcomes: A systematic review
Impacts of heat exposure in utero on long-term health and social outcomes: A systematic review
Background
Climate change, particularly global warming, is amongst the greatest threats to human health. While short-term effects of heat exposure in pregnancy, such as preterm birth, are well documented, long-term effects have received less attention. This review aims to systematically assess evidence on the long-term impacts on the foetus of heat exposure in utero.
Methods
A search was conducted in August 2019 and updated in April 2023 in MEDLINE(PubMed). We included studies on the relationship of environmental heat exposure during pregnancy and any long-term outcomes. Risk of bias was assessed using tools developed by the Joanna-Briggs Institute, and the evidence was appraised using the GRADE approach. Synthesis without Meta-Analysis (SWiM) guidelines were used.
Results
Eighteen thousand six hundred twenty one records were screened, with 29 studies included across six outcome groups. Studies were mostly conducted in high-income countries (n = 16/25), in cooler climates. All studies were observational, with 17 cohort, 5 case-control and 8 cross-sectional studies. The timeline of the data is from 1913 to 2019, and individuals ranged in age from neonates to adults, and the elderly. Increasing heat exposure during pregnancy was associated with decreased earnings and lower educational attainment (n = 4/6), as well as worsened cardiovascular (n = 3/6), respiratory (n = 3/3), psychiatric (n = 7/12) and anthropometric (n = 2/2) outcomes, possibly culminating in increased overall mortality (n = 2/3). The effect on female infants was greater than on males in 8 of 9 studies differentiating by sex. The quality of evidence was low in respiratory and longevity outcome groups to very low in all others.
Conclusions
Increasing heat exposure was associated with a multitude of detrimental outcomes across diverse body systems. The biological pathways involved are yet to be elucidated, but could include epigenetic and developmental perturbations, through interactions with the placenta and inflammation. This highlights the need for further research into the long-term effects of heat exposure, biological pathways, and possible adaptation strategies in studies, particularly in neglected regions. Heat exposure in-utero has the potential to compound existing health and social inequalities. Poor study design of the included studies constrains the conclusions of this review, with heterogenous exposure measures and outcomes rendering comparisons across contexts/studies difficult.
Child health, Climate change, Epigenetics, Heat exposure, Long-term effects, Maternal health, Metabolic disease, Pregnancy, Socioeconomic impact
Brink, Nicholas
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Lakhoo, Darshnika P.
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Solarin, Ijeoma
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Maimela, Gloria
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von Dadelszen, Peter
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Norris, Shane A.
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Chersich, Matthew F.
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4 May 2024
Brink, Nicholas
b3c655be-d0b4-45d3-a771-70b4aff97a71
Lakhoo, Darshnika P.
34dc28ad-a381-4d16-90a0-0ad125d849ab
Solarin, Ijeoma
b5646224-23b1-4ce3-9196-11a9b3e019d0
Maimela, Gloria
f274b433-e910-464e-b7ab-496f05dbd858
von Dadelszen, Peter
99289cc7-421a-405b-b2b7-9636ec4818e8
Norris, Shane A.
1d346f1b-6d5f-4bca-ac87-7589851b75a4
Chersich, Matthew F.
7946960a-8f28-4572-a986-16f87de0e27b
Brink, Nicholas, Lakhoo, Darshnika P., Solarin, Ijeoma, Maimela, Gloria, von Dadelszen, Peter, Norris, Shane A. and Chersich, Matthew F.
(2024)
Impacts of heat exposure in utero on long-term health and social outcomes: A systematic review.
BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth, 24 (1), [344].
(doi:10.1186/s12884-024-06512-0).
Abstract
Background
Climate change, particularly global warming, is amongst the greatest threats to human health. While short-term effects of heat exposure in pregnancy, such as preterm birth, are well documented, long-term effects have received less attention. This review aims to systematically assess evidence on the long-term impacts on the foetus of heat exposure in utero.
Methods
A search was conducted in August 2019 and updated in April 2023 in MEDLINE(PubMed). We included studies on the relationship of environmental heat exposure during pregnancy and any long-term outcomes. Risk of bias was assessed using tools developed by the Joanna-Briggs Institute, and the evidence was appraised using the GRADE approach. Synthesis without Meta-Analysis (SWiM) guidelines were used.
Results
Eighteen thousand six hundred twenty one records were screened, with 29 studies included across six outcome groups. Studies were mostly conducted in high-income countries (n = 16/25), in cooler climates. All studies were observational, with 17 cohort, 5 case-control and 8 cross-sectional studies. The timeline of the data is from 1913 to 2019, and individuals ranged in age from neonates to adults, and the elderly. Increasing heat exposure during pregnancy was associated with decreased earnings and lower educational attainment (n = 4/6), as well as worsened cardiovascular (n = 3/6), respiratory (n = 3/3), psychiatric (n = 7/12) and anthropometric (n = 2/2) outcomes, possibly culminating in increased overall mortality (n = 2/3). The effect on female infants was greater than on males in 8 of 9 studies differentiating by sex. The quality of evidence was low in respiratory and longevity outcome groups to very low in all others.
Conclusions
Increasing heat exposure was associated with a multitude of detrimental outcomes across diverse body systems. The biological pathways involved are yet to be elucidated, but could include epigenetic and developmental perturbations, through interactions with the placenta and inflammation. This highlights the need for further research into the long-term effects of heat exposure, biological pathways, and possible adaptation strategies in studies, particularly in neglected regions. Heat exposure in-utero has the potential to compound existing health and social inequalities. Poor study design of the included studies constrains the conclusions of this review, with heterogenous exposure measures and outcomes rendering comparisons across contexts/studies difficult.
Text
s12884-024-06512-0
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More information
Accepted/In Press date: 11 April 2024
Published date: 4 May 2024
Additional Information:
Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2024.
Keywords:
Child health, Climate change, Epigenetics, Heat exposure, Long-term effects, Maternal health, Metabolic disease, Pregnancy, Socioeconomic impact
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 496935
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/496935
ISSN: 1471-2393
PURE UUID: 9d287acb-99d5-424d-b47e-5afe82b758f6
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Date deposited: 08 Jan 2025 13:06
Last modified: 10 Jan 2025 03:05
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Contributors
Author:
Nicholas Brink
Author:
Darshnika P. Lakhoo
Author:
Ijeoma Solarin
Author:
Gloria Maimela
Author:
Peter von Dadelszen
Author:
Matthew F. Chersich
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