Study improves understanding of effects of household air pollution during pregnancy

April 16, 2024

Incomplete combustion of biomass fuels such as wood, crop waste, and animal dung, which are used for cooking in 36% of households worldwide, result in household air pollution. Household air pollution is estimated to be responsible for 2.3 million premature deaths and 91.5 million disability-adjusted life-years lost annually. Women, often the primary cooks at home, bear the brunt of exposure to household air pollution. Our findings suggest that the link between household air pollution and poor fetal growth may be less pronounced than previously assumed. Acknowledging the study's limitations, researchers highlighted the possibility that interventions to reduce exposure to household air pollution may need to occur earlier in pregnancy or even before conception.

The study, published in Lancet Global Health, was conducted in 3,200 households across resource-poor settings in Guatemala, India, Rwanda, and Peru, and focussed on assessing the effects of reducing personal exposures to household air pollution on fetal growth in a randomised controlled trial.

Incomplete combustion of biomass fuels such as wood, crop waste, and animal dung, which are used for cooking in 36% of households worldwide, result in household air pollution. Household air pollution is estimated to be responsible for 2.3 million premature deaths and 91.5 million disability-adjusted life-years lost annually. Women, often the primary cooks at home, bear the brunt of exposure to household air pollution.

To assess the impact of air pollution reduction on fetal growth, half of pregnant women were assigned the use of liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) stoves, resulting in a significant 66% reduction in exposure to fine particulate matter, whereas the remaining half continued the use of the habitual biomass fuels for cooking. Unlike previous studies that relied solely on birth weight, this research utilised ultrasounds to track fetal growth, providing a more nuanced understanding of the impact of air pollution on prenatal development.

However, despite this substantial reduction in exposure, researchers found no clinically meaningful differences in fetal growth between the intervention group and those who continued using biomass fuels. These results are consistent with previous findings from the same group relating to the impact of air pollution on birthweight.

The lead author, Professor William Checkley from Johns Hopkins University, noted: 'While our study underscores the importance of reducing household air pollution, our findings challenge the widely held belief that such pollution significantly impacts fetal growth. Our findings suggest that the link between household air pollution and poor fetal growth may be less pronounced than previously assumed. Our findings do not support the use of unventilated liquefied petroleum gas stove and fuel delivery intervention as a strategy to reduce poor fetal growth in resource-limited settings.'

Study author, Professor Aris Papageorghiou from the University of Oxford, added: 'In this study we undertook detailed evaluation of fetal growth throughout pregnancy in 3,200 pregnant women in Peru, Rwanda, Guatemala, and India. The intervention was largely successful at reducing air pollution exposures, yet we did not find any benefits in fetal growth trajectories, including estimated fetal weight through birthweight. This suggests that the field requires a re-think of intervention strategies that will reduce both household air pollution and improve fetal outcomes, but one based on LPG stove and free fuel is not clearly enough.'

Acknowledging the study's limitations, researchers highlighted the possibility that interventions to reduce exposure to household air pollution may need to occur earlier in pregnancy or even before conception. Additionally, despite the significant reduction in exposure achieved by the intervention group, average prenatal exposures still exceeded recommended guidelines for air quality three times.

The study 'Cooking with liquefied petroleum gas or biomass and fetal growth outcomes: a multi-country randomised controlled trial' is published in Lancet Global Health.

The source of this news is from University of Oxford

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