# Project 2: Maternal Exposure to Environmental and Psychosocial Stressors and Cardiovascular Risks after Pregnancy

> **NIH NIH P50** · UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA · 2020 · $343,843

## Abstract

PROJECT SUMMARY/ABSTRACT—PROJECT 2 
 The prevalence of cardiovascular disease (CVD) has continued to climb among US women, despite 
greater prevention efforts. Pregnancy may provide an understudied window into a woman’s long-term 
cardiovascular health. Normal physiological adaptations to support a fetus can act as a stressor on a woman’s 
body, potentially uncovering or exacerbating underlying chronic conditions. Cardiovascular-related 
complications, such as preeclampsia and hypertension, may have persistent effects into the postpartum period 
and have been related to elevated CVD risk in later life. Moreover, environmental exposures such as air pollution 
have been associated with altered maternal blood pressure and lipid homeostasis, while psychosocial stressors 
may independently influence maternal health by increasing inflammation and risk of prenatal hypertensive 
disorders. Efforts to understand the roles of both the environment and psychosocial stress in prenatal 
cardiovascular complications and long-term maternal health risks may be most critical among health disparity 
populations living in urban communities, who disproportionately experience the combined impacts of multiple 
social, physical, and environmental stressors that may exacerbate health risks. Despite growing evidence of the 
impact of such exposures on maternal cardiovascular health during pregnancy, there is little to no research 
available on whether environmental exposures and social stressors during the prenatal period may enhance a 
mother’s cardiovascular risk in the postpartum period and into later life, particularly in minority populations. Even 
less is known about the mechanisms underlying these effects in the postpartum context, but recent studies 
support a key role for miRNAs in both pregnancy and in risk of CVD and suggest that these epigenetic regulators 
can be modulated by environmental exposures. We propose to investigate whether prenatal traffic-related and 
ambient air pollution exposures increase maternal postpartum cardiovascular effects in 500 women in the 
MADRES cohort, a prospective pregnancy cohort of predominantly Hispanic, socioeconomically-disadvantaged 
women. We will accomplish this by the following specific aims: (1) investigate the impact of air pollutants and 
social stressors during pregnancy on trajectories of cardiovascular risk factors in the first four years postpartum 
and examine whether these effects vary by pregnancy-related complications and acculturation factors; and (2) 
determine the role of cardiovascular-related miRNA in prenatal air pollution-related associations in 
cardiovascular health trajectories in the first four years postpartum, and test whether they mediate these 
associations and examine their functional relevance. These results may shed light on the contribution of 
environmental and social stressors to CVD risk factors in the postpartum period and could be critical for 
identifying women at greater risk of deve...

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 10058751
- **Project number:** 9P50MD015705-06
- **Recipient organization:** UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
- **Principal Investigator:** Shohreh F Farzan
- **Activity code:** P50 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2020
- **Award amount:** $343,843
- **Award type:** 9
- **Project period:** 2015-09-01 → 2025-03-31

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/10058751

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 10058751, Project 2: Maternal Exposure to Environmental and Psychosocial Stressors and Cardiovascular Risks after Pregnancy (9P50MD015705-06). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-21 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/10058751. Licensed CC0.

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