Publication details

Monitoring and assessing the association of polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs) and flame retardants (Dechlorane Plus and DBDPE) with parental lifestyle factors in a mother-child cohort of the Finnish population (NUGEN)

Investor logo
Authors

SALAH Soha MYLLYNEN Paivi PŘIBYLOVÁ Petra KUKUČKA Petr LAATIO Liisa SIEPPI Elina KUMMU Maria PALANISWAMY Saranya ABASS Khaled

Year of publication 2026
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Emerging Contaminants
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Science

Citation
web https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405665025001301
Doi https://doi.org/10.1016/j.emcon.2025.100596
Keywords Polybrominated diphenyl ethers; Maternal exposure; Cord blood; Flame retardants; Pregnancy; Environmental exposure
Attached files
Description Background: Human exposure to flame retardants, particularly PBDEs, is detectable in maternal plasma and linked to various adverse health outcomes, but the influence of parental lifestyle and diet on these levels remains poorly understood. Objective: To monitor PBDEs in maternal and cord plasma samples and examine their relationships with parental health determinants - specifically dietary intake, environmental exposure, and lifestyle factorsin a Northern Finland population for the first time. Methods: Maternal and cord plasma samples from 102 NUGEN cohort pairs were collected during caesarean sections at Oulu University Hospital. Plasma samples were analysed for PBDE congeners (BDE-47, BDE-66, BDE-85, BDE-99, BDE-10 0, BDE-153, BDE-154, BDE-183, BDE-209), DBDPE, and chlorinated flame retardants (sDP, aDP), with lipid adjustment. Total cord BFRs were calculated as the sum of all congeners quantified in cord plasma, and total maternal BFRs were calculated analogously using maternal plasma. Results: PBDE congeners with the highest detection frequencies were maternal BDE-28 (42 %), BDE-47 (42 %), BDE-153 (100 %); and cord BDE-28 (50 %), BDE-47 (52 %), BDE-153 (95 %), BDE-154 (33 %). Maternal smoking was inversely associated with cord BDE-28 (-0.80 [-1.50, -0.09]). Higher paternal education was negatively associated with cord BDE-28 (-0.93 [-1.58, -0.27]), BDE-153 (-0.21 [-0.43, -0.0 05]), and BDE-154 (-4.34 [-8.00, -0.68]). High vegetable intake was inversely associated with cord BDE-154 (-3.99 [-7.76, -0.22]), while high meat intake was positively associated with total cord BFRs (0.42 [0.06, 0.78]), cord BDE-47 (0.67 [0.13, 1.21]), and maternal BDE-47 (0.77 [0.16, 1.37]). Conclusion: PBDE levels were higher in cord than maternal samples but lower than in other European countries. Findings support maternal-to-child PBDE transfer and reveal associations with lifestyle, diet, and sociodemographic factors, including paternal variables-a notable gap in prior research.
(c) 2025 The Authors. Publishing services by Elsevier B.V. on behalf of KeAi Communications Co. Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-ncnd/4.0/).
Related projects:

You are running an old browser version. We recommend updating your browser to its latest version.

More info