Journal Article
Prenatal exposure to phthalates and anogenital distance in male infants from a low-exposed Danish cohort (2010-2012)
Jensen, TK; Frederiksen, H; Kyhl, HB; Lassen, TH; Swan, SH; Bornehag, CG; Skakkebaek, NE; Main, KM; Lind, DV; Husby, S; Andersson, AM
Environmental Health Perspectives
ISSN: 0091-6765
EISSN: 1552-9924
US DEPT HEALTH HUMAN SCIENCES PUBLIC HEALTH SCIENCE
BACKGROUND: Phthalates comprise a large class of chemicals used in a variety of consumer products. Several have anti-androgenic properties and in rodents prenatal exposure has been associated with reduced anogenital distance (AGD); the distance from the anus to the genitals in male offspring. Few human studies have been conducted but associations between the anti-androgenic phthalates and male AGD have been reported.
OBJECTIVE: To study the association between phthalate exposure in late pregnancy in Danish women pregnant in 2010-2012 and AGD in their infants at 3 months of age (N=273).
METHODS: In the Odense child cohort urinary concentrations of 12 phthalate metabolites of di-ethyl, di-n-butyl-, di-iso-butyl-, di-(2-ethylhexyl)-, butyl-benzyl- and di-iso-nonyl phthalate (DEP, DnBP, DiBP, DEHP, BBzP and DiNP, respectively) were measured among 245 mothers to boys at approximately gestational week 28 (range 20.4-30.4) and adjusted for osmolality. AGD, penile width and weight were measured 3 months after the expected date of birth. Associations between prenatal phthalate exposure and AGD and penile width were estimated using multivariable linear regression adjusting for age and weight-for-age standard deviation score.
RESULTS: Phthalate levels were lower in this population than in a recent Swedish in which phthalates were measured in first trimester. No consistent associations were seen between any prenatal phthalate exposure and AGD or penile width. Most associations were negative for exposures above the first quartile, and for ln-transformed exposures modeled as continuous variables, but there were no consistent dose-response patterns, and associations were not statistically significant (p > 0.05) CONCLUSION: We found no significant trends towards shorter AGD in boys with higher phthalates exposures in this low exposed Danish population.
Environment Abstracts; Toxicology Abstracts; Consumers; Infants; Anogenital; Metabolites; Rodents; Standard deviation; Prenatal experience; Statistical analysis; Phthalic acid; Consumer products; diisononyl phthalate; Dose-response effects; Chemicals; Phthalates; Pregnancy; Progeny; Offspring; ENA 02:Toxicology & Environmental Safety; X 24350:Industrial Chemicals