Abstract

An important step toward understanding the relationship between the environment and child health and development is the comprehensive cataloging of external environmental factors that may modify health and development over the life course. Our understanding of the environmental influences on health is growing increasingly complex. Significant key questions exist as to what genes, environment, and life stage mean to defining normal variations and altered developmental trajectories throughout the life course and also across generations. With the rapid advances in genetic technology came large-scale genomic studies to search for the genetic etiology of complex diseases. While genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have revealed genetic factors and networks that advance our understanding to some extent, it is increasingly recognized that disease causation is largely non-genetic and reflects interactions between an individual's genetic susceptibility and his or her environment. Thus, the full promise of the human genome project to prevent or treat disease and promote good health arguably depends on a commitment to understanding the interactions between our environment and our genetic makeup and requires a design with prospective environmental data collection that considers critical windows of susceptibility that likely correspond to the expression of specific genes and gene pathways. Unlike the genome, which is static, relevant exposures as well as our response to exposures, change over time. This has fostered the complementary concept of the exposome ideally defined as the measure of all exposures of an individual over a lifetime and how those exposures relate to health. The exposome framework considers multiple external exposures (e.g., chemical, social) and behaviors that may modify exposures (e.g., diet), as well as consequences of environmental exposures indexed via biomarkers of physiological response or measures of behavioral response throughout the lifespan. The exposome concept can be applied in prospective developmental studies such as the National Children's Study (NCS) with the practical understanding that even a partial characterization will bring major advances to health. Lessons learned from the NCS provide an important opportunity to inform future studies that can leverage these evolving paradigms in elucidating the role of environment on health across the life course.

Highlights

  • Measuring the EnvironmentThe etiology of health and well-being is increasingly recognized to result from the complex interplay of environmental influences operating at multiple levels, including the individual, the home and family, the neighborhood/community, and beyond [1, 2]

  • Individuals may live in families and communities that are differentially burdened with social toxins, which, in turn, may be related to the variable experiencing of psychosocial stress

  • While far more attention has been given to physical environmental toxicants, more recent consensus statements by the National Academies of Science [2] and the National Institutes of Health [3] point to the need to consider social environmental and behavioral factors as well

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Summary

Introduction

Measuring the EnvironmentThe etiology of health and well-being is increasingly recognized to result from the complex interplay of environmental influences operating at multiple levels, including the individual, the home and family, the neighborhood/community, and beyond [1, 2]. $, inexpensive; $$, expensive; BFRs, brominated flame retardants; C, child; CO, carbon monoxide; DBS, dried blood spots; DC, data collector; ETS, environmental tobacco smoke; FFQ, food frequency questionnaire; GIS, geographic information system; M, mother; NOx, nitrogen oxides; O3, ozone; PAHs, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons; PCBs, polychlorinated biphenyls; PFCs, perfluorinated compounds; SAQ, self-administered questionnaire; SVOCs, semi volatile organic compounds; TBD, to be developed; VOCs, volatile organic compounds.

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