Environmental Tobacco Smoke in the Residential Environment Kimberly Yolton, Ph.D. Children’s...

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Environmental Tobacco Smoke in the Residential Environment Kimberly Yolton, Ph.D. Children’s Environmental Health Center, Cincinnati

Transcript of Environmental Tobacco Smoke in the Residential Environment Kimberly Yolton, Ph.D. Children’s...

Page 1: Environmental Tobacco Smoke in the Residential Environment Kimberly Yolton, Ph.D. Children’s Environmental Health Center, Cincinnati.

Environmental Tobacco Smoke in the Residential

Environment

Kimberly Yolton, Ph.D.

Children’s Environmental Health Center, Cincinnati

Page 2: Environmental Tobacco Smoke in the Residential Environment Kimberly Yolton, Ph.D. Children’s Environmental Health Center, Cincinnati.

Tobacco Smoke

• Group A carcinogen

• Over 4000 chemicals

• 43 carcinogens including:• benzene• chromium• cadmium• polonium-210• formaldehyde

Page 3: Environmental Tobacco Smoke in the Residential Environment Kimberly Yolton, Ph.D. Children’s Environmental Health Center, Cincinnati.

Prenatal Exposure

• 44% of female

smokers continue

to smoke during

pregnancy

(Kahn, 2002)

Page 4: Environmental Tobacco Smoke in the Residential Environment Kimberly Yolton, Ph.D. Children’s Environmental Health Center, Cincinnati.

ETS Exposure in the Home

• 43% of US children are exposed to ETS in their own homes by report

• 85% of children have measurable cotinine levels

(Pirkle, 1996)

Page 5: Environmental Tobacco Smoke in the Residential Environment Kimberly Yolton, Ph.D. Children’s Environmental Health Center, Cincinnati.

Jordaan, 1999

Cotinine Levels by Exposure Source

0

20

40

60

80

100

Mother Male Parent CommunityHi

CommunityMid

CommunityLo

Me

dia

n C

oti

nin

e L

ev

el (

ng

/ml)

Page 6: Environmental Tobacco Smoke in the Residential Environment Kimberly Yolton, Ph.D. Children’s Environmental Health Center, Cincinnati.

Tobacco Smoke Links to Child Health

• Prematurity

• Low Apgars

• Poor growth

• Ear infection

• Hearing loss

• Colic

• SIDS

• Respiratory illness

• Asthma exacerbation

• Atopy

• $4.6 billion annually in health care costs

Page 7: Environmental Tobacco Smoke in the Residential Environment Kimberly Yolton, Ph.D. Children’s Environmental Health Center, Cincinnati.

Tobacco Smoke Links to Child Development

• Intelligence• Reasoning• Achievement• Perceptual skills

• Reading• Language• Verbal

comprehension

General Developmental Delays and specific deficits in the following areas:

Page 8: Environmental Tobacco Smoke in the Residential Environment Kimberly Yolton, Ph.D. Children’s Environmental Health Center, Cincinnati.

Prenatal Tobacco Smoke Exposure and IQ at 9-12 years

100

104

108

112

116

Verbal IQ Performance IQ Full Scale IQ

01-15>15

# cigaretttes

Fried, 1998

Page 9: Environmental Tobacco Smoke in the Residential Environment Kimberly Yolton, Ph.D. Children’s Environmental Health Center, Cincinnati.

Tobacco Smoke Exposure and Adjusted Reasoning Scores at Age 5

9.8

10.3

10.8

11.3

None Prenatal Postnatal

Eskenazi, 1995

*

Me

an

Rav

en

Sco

res

Page 10: Environmental Tobacco Smoke in the Residential Environment Kimberly Yolton, Ph.D. Children’s Environmental Health Center, Cincinnati.

NHANES III1988-1994

• 4399 children aged 6-16

• Denied tobacco use in past 5 days

• Serum cotinine levels <15 ng/ml• Non smokers• ETS exposure

Yolton, et al, in progress

Page 11: Environmental Tobacco Smoke in the Residential Environment Kimberly Yolton, Ph.D. Children’s Environmental Health Center, Cincinnati.

NHANES III1988-1994

• Cognitive testing• Math mean=100,

SD=15• Reading mean=100, SD=15• Block design mean=10, SD=3• Digit Span mean=10, SD=3

• Controls for potential covariatesGender Region Race/Ethnicity

Marital Status Poverty Parent Education

Lead Ferritin

Page 12: Environmental Tobacco Smoke in the Residential Environment Kimberly Yolton, Ph.D. Children’s Environmental Health Center, Cincinnati.

80.0

85.0

90.0

95.0

100.0

Math Reading

Mea

n S

core

Mean Math and Reading Scores in 6-16 Year Olds by Cotinine Quintiles

Yolton, in progress

Page 13: Environmental Tobacco Smoke in the Residential Environment Kimberly Yolton, Ph.D. Children’s Environmental Health Center, Cincinnati.

Adjusted Estimates of Cognitive Scores at Serum Cotinine <15 ng/ml

Adjustedestimate (SE)

p value

Reading -1.07 (.33) .002

Math -.76 (.30) .01

Block Design -.23 (.05) <.001

Digit Span -.05 (.06) .36

Yolton, in progress

Page 14: Environmental Tobacco Smoke in the Residential Environment Kimberly Yolton, Ph.D. Children’s Environmental Health Center, Cincinnati.

Adjusted Estimates of Reading Score Change for 1 ng/ml Increase in Cotinine

Reading No. Adjustedestimate

Pvalue

<15 ng/ml 4399 -1.07 (.33) .002

<10 ng/ml 4391 -1.23 (.41) .004

<5 ng/ml 4336 -1.43 (.50) .01

<1 ng/ml 3502 -4.98 (1.75) .01

<0.5 ng/ml 2914 -11.84 (3.97) .004

Page 15: Environmental Tobacco Smoke in the Residential Environment Kimberly Yolton, Ph.D. Children’s Environmental Health Center, Cincinnati.

Adjusted Slope of Cognitive Scores Among Full Sample and Subsample

with Prenatal Data

6-16 yrs

SE (p)

6-11 yrsw/prenatalvariables

SE (p)

6-11 yrsw/prenatalsmokingSE (p)

Reading -1.07 (.002) -.87 (.045) -.87 (.03)

Math -.76 (.01) -.16 (.71) -.27 (.51)

Block Design -.23 (<.001) -.16 (.02) -.18 (.02)

Yolton, in progress

Page 16: Environmental Tobacco Smoke in the Residential Environment Kimberly Yolton, Ph.D. Children’s Environmental Health Center, Cincinnati.

Tobacco Smoke Links to Child Behavior

• Impulsivity

• Risk taking

• Conduct disorder

• Rebelliousness

• Negativity

• Attention deficits

• Externalizing

Page 17: Environmental Tobacco Smoke in the Residential Environment Kimberly Yolton, Ph.D. Children’s Environmental Health Center, Cincinnati.

Prenatal Exposure and Behavior at Age 12

96

98

100

102

104

Conduct Attention Disruptive

None

Low

High

Fergusson, 1993

p <.001

# Cigarettes

Page 18: Environmental Tobacco Smoke in the Residential Environment Kimberly Yolton, Ph.D. Children’s Environmental Health Center, Cincinnati.

Adjusted Estimated RR of Child Behavior Problems by Tobacco

Smoke Exposure

0

0.5

1

1.5

2

2.5

3

Early Pregnancy 6 months 5 years

0

1-9

10-19

>19

**

*

*

***

Williams, 1998

Est

ima

ted

Re

lativ

e R

isk # cigarettes

Page 19: Environmental Tobacco Smoke in the Residential Environment Kimberly Yolton, Ph.D. Children’s Environmental Health Center, Cincinnati.

Evidence of Detrimental Effects of Tobacco Smoke

• Health consequences

• Developmental delays

• Behavior problems

• Prenatal exposure - clear evidence

• Postnatal ETS exposure - inconclusive

Page 20: Environmental Tobacco Smoke in the Residential Environment Kimberly Yolton, Ph.D. Children’s Environmental Health Center, Cincinnati.

Research Needs: ImportanceEstimated Number of US Children 6-16 Yrs

Exposed to Damaging Levels of ETS

CotinineLevel Percent

No.Affected

> 15 ng/ml 5% 1.9 million> 10 ng/ml 6% 2.0 million> 5 ng/ml 8% 2.7 million> 1 ng/ml 26% 9.0 million> 0.5 ng/mL 38% 13.3 million

Yolton, in progress

Page 21: Environmental Tobacco Smoke in the Residential Environment Kimberly Yolton, Ph.D. Children’s Environmental Health Center, Cincinnati.

Research Needs:Methodologies

• Use of biomarkers of exposure

• Large studies to separate prenatal and postnatal exposure effects

• Consistent measures of child outcome

Page 22: Environmental Tobacco Smoke in the Residential Environment Kimberly Yolton, Ph.D. Children’s Environmental Health Center, Cincinnati.

Research Needs:Topics

• More studies focused on ETS effects on child development and behavior

• Exploration into how ETS interacts with other prevalent toxicants

• Discovery of mechanisms by which ETS exerts its effects

Page 23: Environmental Tobacco Smoke in the Residential Environment Kimberly Yolton, Ph.D. Children’s Environmental Health Center, Cincinnati.

Research Needs:Topics (continued)

• Further exploration into the impact of ETS exposure during pregnancy

• Development of novel intervention strategies to protect children from ETS exposure