Abstract

Although there is growing awareness of the relationship between air pollution and preterm birth, limited data exist regarding the relationship with spontaneous preterm birth and severe neonatal outcomes. This study aimed to examine the association between traffic-associated air pollution exposure in pregnancy and adverse perinatal outcomes including extremes of preterm birth, neonatal intensive care unit admissions, low birthweight, neonatal respiratory diagnosis, neonatal respiratory support, and neonatal sepsis evaluation. This was a retrospective cohort study of singleton pregnancies of patients residing in a metropolitan area in the southern United States. Using monitors strategically located across the region, average nitrogen dioxide concentrations were obtained from the Environmental Protection Agency Air Quality System database. For patients living within 10 miles of a monitoring station, average exposure to nitrogen dioxide was estimated for individual patients' pregnancy by trimester. Logistic regression models were used to assess the effect of pollutant exposure on gestational age at birth, indicated vs spontaneous delivery, and neonatal outcomes while adjusting for maternal age, self-reported race, parity, season of conception, diabetes mellitus, body mass index, registered Health Equity Index, and nitrogen dioxide monitor region. Adjusted odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals were calculated for an interquartile increase in average nitrogen dioxide exposure. Between January 1, 2013 and December 31, 2021, 93,164 patients delivered a singleton infant. Of these, 62,189 had measured nitrogen dioxide exposure during the pregnancy from a nearby monitoring station. Higher average nitrogen dioxide exposure throughout pregnancy was significantly associated with preterm birth (adjusted odds ratio, 1.94; 95% confidence interval, 1.77-2.12) and an increase in neonatal intensive care unit admissions, low birthweight infants, neonatal respiratory diagnosis, neonatal respiratory support, and neonatal sepsis evaluation. This relationship persisted for nulliparous patients and spontaneous preterm birth, and had a greater association with earlier preterm birth. In a metropolitan area, increased exposure to the air pollutant nitrogen dioxide in pregnancy was associated with spontaneous preterm birth and had a greater association with extremely preterm birth. A greater association with neonatal intensive care unit admissions, low-birthweight infants, neonatal respiratory diagnosis, neonatal respiratory support, and neonatal sepsis evaluation was found even in term infants.

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