Department of Psychiatry, Chung-Shan Medical and Dental College, Taichung, Taiwan
Department of Environmental and Occupational Health, National Cheng-Kung University Medical College, Tainan, Taiwan
Department of Psychology, Kaohsiung Medical University, Kaohsiung, Taiwan
Department of Psychiatry, Tainan City Hospital, Tainan, Taiwan
Correspondence: Dr Nai-Wen Guo, Department of Psychology, Kaohsiung Medical University, 100 Shih Chuan 1st Road, Kaohsiung, Taiwan
Declaration of interest None. Funding from the National Science Council, Taiwan (see Acknowledgements).
ABSTRACT
Background From 1978 to 1979, a group of people in Taiwan were exposed to high levels of heat-degraded polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) owing to accidental ingestion of contaminated rice oil. Children born to mothers following the exposure (Yucheng children) were known to have hyperpigmented skin and other dysmorphology after birth.
Aims To determine the effect of prenatal exposure to PCBs on cognitive development in Yucheng children.
Method One hundred and eighteen Yucheng children prenatally exposed to PCBs and degradation products, and community-matched control children who were exposed to background levels only, were followed from 1985 to 1998. The Bayley Scale for Infant Development, Chinese version of the Stanford Binet IQ Test, Raven's Coloured Progressive Matrices and Raven's Standardised Progressive Matrices were used to assess the cognitive development of these children.
Results The Yucheng children scored lower than control children on each of these methods of measurement between the ages of 2 and 12 years.
Conclusions Prenatal exposure to PCBs and their derivatives has long-term adverse effects on cognitive development in humans.
Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) were widely used as a dielectric in transformers and capacitors, as well as in cables, small electric parts, etc. They became worldwide contaminants by 1969, after which use was prohibited in many developed countries. Polychlorinated dibenzofurans (PCDFs) and polychlorinated dibenzodioxins (PCDDs) can be released as by-products of many industrial processes. The former compounds are the most toxic degradation products of PCBs. All these substances have been found in the blood and adipose tissues of people all over the world (Kimbrough, 1985; Jensen, 1987).
Typical human exposures come from environmental contamination of the food supply, and from occupational exposures. Two epidemics of intoxication with heat-degraded PCBs have occurred: in Japan in the 1960s, and in the Yucheng (oil disease) episode in Taiwan in the 1970s. The cause of these two Asian episodes was consumption of rice-bran cooking oils contaminated with PCBs during processing. The aim of this paper is to summarise the effect of prenatal exposure to PCBs and their derivatives on the cognitive development of children born to mothers who were exposed in the Yucheng epidemic.
METHOD
Subjects
In the summer of 1985, we conducted the first field survey of all living
children who had been born to mothers poisoned by PCBs and their derivatives
in the 1978-1979 incident. A total of 118 children, born between June 1978 and
March 1985, entered this study after their parents had given permission. One
hundred and eighteen unexposed children were selected as a paired control
group, individually matched by gender, age (age difference less than 15 days
for those under 1 year of age and less than 1 month for those over 1 year).
The difference in the mothers' ages in each pair was less than 3 years. We
also matched for socio-economic status and residential location of the
parents. The socio-economic status ratings for the children were based on the
educational levels of both parents and the occupational status of the parent
with the higher occupational level. The five-point system used to score
educational level was: 1 point for 6 years or less of education; 2 points for
7-9 years; 3 points for 10-12 years; 4 points for college level (13-16 years);
and 5 points for postgraduate level (more than 16 years). The five-point
system for occupational status was: unskilled, 1 point; semi-skilled worker, 2
points; skilled worker, 3 points; semi-professional, 4 points; and
professional, 5 points. The total scores of these three variables can range
from 3 to 15. As expected, there was no difference in age and socio-economic
status scores between Yucheng children and the matched control children. One
field study has been conducted each year since 1985.
Measurements
Four cognitive measurement tools, according to the different ages of the
subjects, were used in this study. These were the Bayley Scales for Infant
Development (BSID) for those aged from 6 months to 30 months, the Chinese
version of the Stanford-Binet IQ Test for those aged 30 months to 6 years,
Raven's Coloured Progressive Matrices (CPM) for those aged 5-9 years, and
Raven's Standard Progressive Matrices (SPM) for those aged above 9 years.
These tests were administered annually to all the children at their homes.
Because these cognitive measurement tools have their own age-range
limitations, each subject's score was individualised according to the
subject's actual age on the date of testing. The Yucheng child and the control
child were tested on the same day by the same tester, and random
cross-validations were carried out by a senior clinical psychologist (N.W.G.).
The examiners were unaware of the children's history of exposure. All
examiners held bachelor's degrees in either special education or psychology
and were trained and supervised by our senior clinical psychologist.
Analysis
Student's t-test was used to compare the difference in scores at
each age level between each of the 118 Yucheng children and their matched
controls.
RESULTS
Data from 1985 to 1998 are available. The mean age of the Yucheng children and the control children on the standard date, 31 August 1985, was 3.6 years.
Figures 1 and 2 show comparisons of Mental Development Index (MDI) and Psychomotor Development Index (PDI) scores for Yucheng children and their controls from 6 months to 2 years. The Yucheng children scored lower than the control children at each age level on the MDI scale, and at three out of four levels on the PDI scale, but because of relatively small numbers only one difference PDI scale at 2 years was significant at the 0.05 level. Figure 3 shows comparisons of the two groups on Stanford-Binet IQs by age level from 2 years to 5 years. Here also the Yucheng children scored lower at each of the four age levels, significant differences being noted at ages 4 and 5 years. The differences between these two groups at different age levels ranged from 2 to 7 points.
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Figures 4 and 5 show the comparisons of the two groups on CPM and SPM at age levels 5-8 years and 9-15 years, respectively. The Yucheng children scored lower than the control children in CPM at ages 5, 6, 7 and 8 years, significant differences being noted at ages 7 and 8 years. Differences between Yucheng children and controls on SPM scores were all in the same direction, and were significant at ages 11 and 12 years. Significant differences were not found after 12 years, suggesting a tendency for the Yucheng children to catch up gradually from around 13 years, a finding that deserves clarification.
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DISCUSSION
Effects of PCBs on children
The PCBs had been partially heat-degraded, and were further contaminated
with high levels of PCDFs and polychlorinated quarterphenyls
(Masuda et al, 1986).
In 1979, over 2000 persons in Taiwan were intoxicated by heat-degraded PCBs
(Hsu et al, 1985).
Children exposed prenatally to PCBs/PCDFs (Yucheng children) had higher
prenatal mortality and lower birth-weight; dysmorphic features at birth such
as hyperpigmentation, neonatal teeth, and deformed nails; and delays of
developmental milestones (Miller,
1985; Rogan et al,
1988). These symptoms were caused not only by PCBs but by their
heat-degraded products, PCDFs (Kashimoto
et al, 1985). In humans PCBs, PCDFs and PCDDs have long
half-lives, and these compounds have been found to have significant
developmental toxicity in animals (Tilson
et al, 1990). They are known to cross the placenta and
affect the foetus (Kodama & Ota,
1980).
Cognitive development in children prenatally exposed to PCBs and their contaminants has been carefully studied in four cohorts of humans.
Findings in auditory event-related potentials
Chen & Hsu (1994)
compared the auditory event-related potentials (P300) in 27 pairs of Yucheng
and control children in 1991. This method offers considerable promise as a
means of testing children with disorders of cognitive function. Prolonged
latencies and reduced amplitude were shown with P300 in Yucheng children,
indicating slow cognitive processing and attention deficits. The P300
latencies were also found to be inversely correlated with Wechsler
Intelligence Scale for Children-Revised (WISCR) full-scale IQs. These findings
suggest that the reduced developmental quotient and IQ scores in the Yucheng
children may have a neurophysiological basis.
Other factors that could affect the results
Yucheng children and control children were similar with respect to
socio-economic status, educational level and parental ages. None of the
exposed families had any psychiatric history, none of the exposed mothers had
ever smoked, and only two exposed mothers had drunk alcohol regularly before
though not after marriage.
So far as the possibility of learning effects caused by repeated measures are concerned, it appears that the learning increments by children of the two groups were similar.
Serum levels of PCDFs were not previously measured for the mothers of our subjects. Kashimoto et al (1985) reported mean blood levels of PCBs and PCDFs in a group of 113 Yusho patients as 39 parts per billion (p.p.b.) and 0.076 p.p.b., respectively. In 1991, analysis of serum levels in a randomly selected subgroup of Yucheng children in this study (Guo et al, 1994; Ryan et al, 1994) showed median levels of 106 ng/kg lipid, 160 ng/kg lipid and 1.3 ng/kg whole weight for 2,3,4,7,8-PnCDF, 1,2,3,4,7,8-HxCDF and total PCBs, respectively: levels much higher than those of a pooled serum sample of the matched control children (19 ng/kg, 23 ng/kg and 0.17 ng/kg, respectively).
Raven's Progressive Matrices are considered to be relatively culture-fair and have been used to evaluate the general intelligence factor, i.e. Spearman's g factor (Raven, 1983; Raven et al, 1985). These matrices assess a person's ability to form comparisons and to reason by analogy as well as to show to what extent the subject is capable of organising spatial perceptions into systematically related wholes. Our findings of reduced CPM and SPM scores were consistent with results of the previous assessments in the Yucheng children. A tendency towards a ceiling effect in the SPM scores has been noted since the 1998 field survey, and we are now trying to use another measurement tool, Advanced Progressive Matrices (APM), to minimise this effect.
There may be several reasons why the cognitive functions of Yucheng children were more severely affected than those of the Michigan and North Carolina cohorts. The main reasons may be that Yucheng exposure involved PCBs with PCDFs, terphenyls and quarterphenyls, and that the total quantity of exposure to PCBs and related chemicals was much higher than in the US cohorts.
Although many studies have been done on the toxicity and mechanisms of PCBs and related compounds, the two Asian out-breaks represent the only known cases of clinically obvious PCB/PCDF poisoning in large groups of adults and children. This particular study is the only prospective longitudinal follow-up study on more than 100 prenatally exposed children. Findings from studying the vicissitudes and possible correlates of the adverse effects on Yucheng children as they grow older will provide important information about the toxicity, health effects and mechanisms of prenatal exposure to PCBs, CDFs and PCDDs.
CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS
A recent report on serum levels in the Yucheng cohort indicated that the Yucheng mothers had serum levels about seven times that of the background level 13 years after the exposure episode (Ryan et al, 1994). Some of the background population, especially those who consume large amounts of food from contaminated sources such as Lake Michigan fish, may have similar serum levels to the Yucheng mothers.
Our findings of poorer cognitive development in Yucheng children indicate that subsets of the general population can be at risk of cognitive changes, even with background levels of exposure.
LIMITATIONS
Following the cognitive development of the Yucheng children as they grow to adulthood will shed more light on the long-term adverse effects of prenatal exposure to PCBs, PCDFs and PCDDs.
Because of the expense of the procedure, we have been unable to carry out further analysis of serum levels of PCBs and their degradation products. We hope to have more samples analysed at National Cheng-Kung University, Taiwan, in order to assess the dose-response relationship. We also need more sophisticated measurement tools to evaluate the cognitive development, neuropsychological and other psychiatric problems in the Yucheng children.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This study was supported by grants NSC74-0301-H002-29, NSC76-0301-H002-09, NSC77-0301-H002-24, NSC78-0301-H006-03, NSC79-0301-H006-02, NSC80-0301-H006-07, NSC81-0421-B006-03YZ, NSC82-0421-B006-065YZ, NSC83-0421-B006-046YZ, NSC84-2621-B006-010YZ, NSC85-2621-B040-003YZ, NSC86-2314-B040-021, NSC87-2314-B040-008, from the National Science Council, Taiwan.
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