摘要:Background: Early-life arsenic exposure has been associated with reduced cell-mediated immunity, but little is known about its effects on humoral immunity. Objective: We evaluated whether prenatal and childhood arsenic exposure was associated with humoral immune function in school-aged children. Methods: Children born in a prospective mother–child cohort in rural Bangladesh were immunized with measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) vaccines at 9 years of age ( n = 525). Arsenic exposure was assessed in urine (U-As), from mothers during pregnancy and their children at 4.5 and 9 years of age. Total IgG (tIgG), tIgE, tIgA, and MMR-specific IgG concentrations were measured in plasma using immunoassays. Results: Arsenic exposure was positively associated with child tIgG and tIgE, but not tIgA. The association with tIgG was mainly apparent in boys ( p for interaction = 0.055), in whom each doubling of maternal U-As was related to an increase in tIgG by 28 mg/dL. The associations of U-As at 9 years with tIgG and tIgE were evident in underweight children ( p for interaction < 0.032). Childhood arsenic exposure tended to impair mumps-specific vaccine response, although the evaluation was complicated by high preimmunization titers. Postimmunization mumps–specific IgG titers tended to decrease with increasing U-As at 4.5 and 9 years of age [regression coefficient (β) = −0.16; 95% confidence interval (CI): −0.33, 0.01; p = 0.064 and β = −0.12; 95% CI: −0.27, −0.029; p = 0.113, respectively) in 25% children with the lowest preexisting mumps-specific IgG titers. Conclusions: Arsenic exposure increased tIgG and tIgE in plasma, and tended to decrease mumps-specific IgG in children at 9 years of age. https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP318