Farmus, LindaTill, ChristineGreen, RivkaHornung, RichardMartinez Mier, E. AngelesAyotte, PierreMuckle, GinaLanphear, Bruce P.Flora, David B.2024-07-192024-07-192021Farmus L, Till C, Green R, et al. Critical windows of fluoride neurotoxicity in Canadian children [published correction appears in Environ Res. 2022 Dec;215(Pt. 3):114468. doi: 10.1016/j.envres.2022.114468]. Environ Res. 2021;200:111315. doi:10.1016/j.envres.2021.111315https://hdl.handle.net/1805/42333Background: Fluoride has been associated with IQ deficits during early brain development, but the period in which children are most sensitive is unknown. Objective: We assessed effects of fluoride on IQ scores across prenatal and postnatal exposure windows. Methods: We used repeated exposures from 596 mother-child pairs in the Maternal-Infant Research on Environmental Chemicals pregnancy and birth cohort. Fluoride was measured in urine (mg/L) collected from women during pregnancy and in their children between 1.9 and 4.4 years; urinary fluoride was adjusted for specific gravity. We estimated infant fluoride exposure (mg/day) using water fluoride concentration and duration of formula-feeding over the first year of life. Intelligence was assessed at 3-4 years using the Wechsler Preschool and Primary Scale of Intelligence-III. We used generalized estimating equations to examine the associations between fluoride exposures and IQ, adjusting for covariates. We report results based on standardized exposures given their varying units of measurement. Results: The association between fluoride and performance IQ (PIQ) significantly differed across prenatal, infancy, and childhood exposure windows collapsing across child sex (p = .001). The strongest association between fluoride and PIQ was during the prenatal window, B = -2.36, 95% CI: -3.63, -1.08; the association was also significant during infancy, B = -2.11, 95% CI: -3.45, -0.76, but weaker in childhood, B = -1.51, 95% CI: -2.90, -0.12. Within sex, the association between fluoride and PIQ significantly differed across the three exposure windows (boys: p = .01; girls: p = .01); among boys, the strongest association was during the prenatal window, B = -3.01, 95% CI: -4.60, -1.42, whereas among girls, the strongest association was during infancy, B = -2.71, 95% CI: -4.59, -0.83. Full-scale IQ estimates were weaker than PIQ estimates for every window. Fluoride was not significantly associated with Verbal IQ across any exposure window. Conclusion: Associations between fluoride exposure and PIQ differed based on timing of exposure. The prenatal window may be critical for boys, whereas infancy may be a critical window for girls.en-USAttribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 InternationalCommunity water fluoridationCritical windows of exposureFluoride neurotoxicityGeneralized estimating equationsIntelligence quotientCritical windows of fluoride neurotoxicity in Canadian childrenArticle