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Chlorination disinfection by-products and risk of congenital anomalies in England and Wales

Chlorination disinfection by-products and risk of congenital anomalies in England and Wales
Chlorination disinfection by-products and risk of congenital anomalies in England and Wales
Background: increased risk of various congenital anomalies has been reported to be associated with trihalomethane (THM) exposure in the water supply.
Objectives: we conducted a registry-based study to determine the relationship between THM concentrations and the risk of congenital anomalies in England and Wales.
Methods: we obtained congenital anomaly data from the National Congenital Anomalies System, regional registries, and the national terminations registry ; THM data were obtained from water companies. Total THM (< 30, 30 to < 60, ? 60 µg/L) , total brominated exposure (< 10, 10 to < 20, ? 20 µg/L) , and bromoform exposure (< 2, 2 to < 4, ? 4 µg/L) were modeled at the place of residence for the first trimester of pregnancy. We included 2,605,226 live births, stillbirths, and terminations with 22,828 cases of congenital anomalies. Analyses using fixed- and random-effects models were performed for broadly defined groups of anomalies (cleft palate/lip, abdominal wall, major cardiac, neural tube, urinary and respiratory defects) , a more restricted set of anomalies with better ascertainment, and for isolated and multiple anomalies. Data were adjusted for sex, maternal age, and socioeconomic status.
Results: we found no statistically significant trends across exposure categories for either the broadly defined or more restricted sets of anomalies. For the restricted set of anomalies with isolated defects, there were significant (p < 0.05) excess risks in the high-exposure categories of total THMs for ventricular septal defects [odds ratio (OR) = 1.43 ; 95% confidence interval (CI) , 1.00–2.04] and of bromoform for major cardiovascular defects and gastroschisis (OR = 1.18 ; 95% CI, 1.00–1.39 ; and OR = 1.38 ; 95% CI, 1.00–1.92, respectively) .
Conclusion: in this large national study we found little evidence for a relationship between THM concentrations in drinking water and risk of congenital anomalies
chlorination, congenital anomalies, disinfection by-products, trihalomethanes
0091-6765
216-222
Nieuwenhuijsen, Mark J.
49620224-0851-44e1-9361-4d601ef475cb
Toledano, Mireille B.
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Bennett, James
3597877b-a326-4fc3-af50-07e59109e993
Best, Nicky
d7d79436-e852-41b3-8007-c4a2d7871b9c
Hambly, Peter
a1cca3b1-e080-4dcb-bba4-40fa9083847b
de Hoogh, Cornelis
7f32e64f-b16c-444a-a0d1-4110a18d3171
Wellesley, Dianna
17cbd6c1-0efb-4df1-ae05-64a44987c9c0
Boyd, Patricia A.
d5eca465-32aa-4066-8823-16c8b8b7fe33
Abramsky, Lenore
f232e3b5-6a56-4364-9f5e-fee284834541
Dattani, Nirupa
fc64fc6f-df31-4f9e-a25e-01fd650230bf
Fawell, John
02767adb-b620-4a11-851f-ac7ae3c82a18
Briggs, David
268ab2b4-4285-46b3-8b93-3611c5689bab
Jarup, Lars
8e121e55-6c45-4ec5-a5dc-f91cb5317d60
Elliott, Paul
5e19ee8c-f18a-417e-ad53-bc807fdfd191
Nieuwenhuijsen, Mark J.
49620224-0851-44e1-9361-4d601ef475cb
Toledano, Mireille B.
94935e97-3241-4d6f-9e50-80aee39c47bd
Bennett, James
3597877b-a326-4fc3-af50-07e59109e993
Best, Nicky
d7d79436-e852-41b3-8007-c4a2d7871b9c
Hambly, Peter
a1cca3b1-e080-4dcb-bba4-40fa9083847b
de Hoogh, Cornelis
7f32e64f-b16c-444a-a0d1-4110a18d3171
Wellesley, Dianna
17cbd6c1-0efb-4df1-ae05-64a44987c9c0
Boyd, Patricia A.
d5eca465-32aa-4066-8823-16c8b8b7fe33
Abramsky, Lenore
f232e3b5-6a56-4364-9f5e-fee284834541
Dattani, Nirupa
fc64fc6f-df31-4f9e-a25e-01fd650230bf
Fawell, John
02767adb-b620-4a11-851f-ac7ae3c82a18
Briggs, David
268ab2b4-4285-46b3-8b93-3611c5689bab
Jarup, Lars
8e121e55-6c45-4ec5-a5dc-f91cb5317d60
Elliott, Paul
5e19ee8c-f18a-417e-ad53-bc807fdfd191

Nieuwenhuijsen, Mark J., Toledano, Mireille B., Bennett, James, Best, Nicky, Hambly, Peter, de Hoogh, Cornelis, Wellesley, Dianna, Boyd, Patricia A., Abramsky, Lenore, Dattani, Nirupa, Fawell, John, Briggs, David, Jarup, Lars and Elliott, Paul (2008) Chlorination disinfection by-products and risk of congenital anomalies in England and Wales. Environmental Health Perspectives, 116 (2), 216-222. (doi:10.1289/ehp.10636).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: increased risk of various congenital anomalies has been reported to be associated with trihalomethane (THM) exposure in the water supply.
Objectives: we conducted a registry-based study to determine the relationship between THM concentrations and the risk of congenital anomalies in England and Wales.
Methods: we obtained congenital anomaly data from the National Congenital Anomalies System, regional registries, and the national terminations registry ; THM data were obtained from water companies. Total THM (< 30, 30 to < 60, ? 60 µg/L) , total brominated exposure (< 10, 10 to < 20, ? 20 µg/L) , and bromoform exposure (< 2, 2 to < 4, ? 4 µg/L) were modeled at the place of residence for the first trimester of pregnancy. We included 2,605,226 live births, stillbirths, and terminations with 22,828 cases of congenital anomalies. Analyses using fixed- and random-effects models were performed for broadly defined groups of anomalies (cleft palate/lip, abdominal wall, major cardiac, neural tube, urinary and respiratory defects) , a more restricted set of anomalies with better ascertainment, and for isolated and multiple anomalies. Data were adjusted for sex, maternal age, and socioeconomic status.
Results: we found no statistically significant trends across exposure categories for either the broadly defined or more restricted sets of anomalies. For the restricted set of anomalies with isolated defects, there were significant (p < 0.05) excess risks in the high-exposure categories of total THMs for ventricular septal defects [odds ratio (OR) = 1.43 ; 95% confidence interval (CI) , 1.00–2.04] and of bromoform for major cardiovascular defects and gastroschisis (OR = 1.18 ; 95% CI, 1.00–1.39 ; and OR = 1.38 ; 95% CI, 1.00–1.92, respectively) .
Conclusion: in this large national study we found little evidence for a relationship between THM concentrations in drinking water and risk of congenital anomalies

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More information

Published date: February 2008
Keywords: chlorination, congenital anomalies, disinfection by-products, trihalomethanes

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 72493
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/72493
ISSN: 0091-6765
PURE UUID: d66103e6-667d-4723-8498-629c00bbd25d

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Date deposited: 16 Feb 2010
Last modified: 13 Mar 2024 21:31

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Contributors

Author: Mark J. Nieuwenhuijsen
Author: Mireille B. Toledano
Author: James Bennett
Author: Nicky Best
Author: Peter Hambly
Author: Cornelis de Hoogh
Author: Dianna Wellesley
Author: Patricia A. Boyd
Author: Lenore Abramsky
Author: Nirupa Dattani
Author: John Fawell
Author: David Briggs
Author: Lars Jarup
Author: Paul Elliott

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