B2318 - Prenatal and early childhood environmental risk factors for psychiatric outcomes using a novel exposure biomarker - 06/11/2014
There is substantial evidence that early environmental insults increase risk for psychiatric disorders,
especially those with strong neurodevelopmental origins. Thus, there is a need to reliably identify these
environmental factors, as well as whether higher exposure level during critical periods for
neurodevelopment are related to greater risk for psychiatric disorders. Moreover, while environmental
toxins have been reliably associated with early neurodevelopment, similar investigations into longer term
and psychiatric outcomes are scarce.
Current approaches use indirect measures of fetal exposure, such as chemical concentrations in maternal
blood and urine, which may not accurately reflect fetal uptake for many toxins due to variable partitioning
across the placenta (Smith et al., 2007). Thus, a direct marker of early exposure is needed to aid our
understanding of the etiology of psychiatric disorders, as well as to aid prevention.
The current study proposes to use a unique and well-characterized birth cohort: the Avon Longitudinal
Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC) and applying an extensively developed and piloted method to
determine multi-toxin early exposure (Arora et al., 2006, 2011; 2012; 2013; Hare et al., 2011; Austin et
al., 2013). Human deciduous teeth undergo systematic mineralization commencing prenatally and are
composed of a collagen-based, lipid-containing, calcium-rich apatite matrix, which accumulates bone
seeking elements and organic compounds. The methodology combines detailed histological analysis and
associated analytical tools to establish a comprehensive record of weekly to monthly exposure history of
multiple chemicals and metals and history of infections from the second trimester through early
childhood.
Aims
The overall goal of this project is to determine the association of early life environmental metal and
chemical toxin and infection exposures with multiple psychiatric and neurological outcomes: psychotic
like experiences, depression, mild cognitive impairment and autstic-like traits. A detailed history of
exposure during prenatal and early childhood development will be established to distinguish between two
important aspects of the exposure profile:
1) Exposure timing: We will construct weekly to monthly exposure history over the prenatal and early
childhood periods in order to identify the developmental period(s) most strongly associated with risk for
poor psychiatric and neurological outcomes.
2) Exposure intensity: Cumulative exposure may be more important than exposure during any single
developmental window and our biomarker allows measurement of cumulative exposure from the prenatal
period to the time of tooth shedding, which occurs between ages 6 to 12 years.