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Effects of prenatal exposure to five parabens on neonatal thyroid function and birth weight: Evidence from SMBCS study.

Authors :
Li, Wenting
Guo, Jianqiu
Wu, Chunhua
Zhang, Jiming
Zhang, Lei
Lv, Shenliang
Lu, Dasheng
Qi, Xiaojuan
Feng, Chao
Liang, Weijiu
Chang, Xiuli
Zhang, Yubin
Xu, Hao
Cao, Yang
Wang, Guoquan
Zhou, Zhijun
Source :
Environmental Research. Sep2020, Vol. 188, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Parabens, suspected as endocrine-disrupting chemicals, are nearly ubiquitous in the human body and exposure to these chemicals during pregnancy may disrupt thyroid hormones homeostasis and even affect fetal growth, although the impacts are still unclear. We aimed to estimate associations of maternal urinary paraben concentrations with cord serum thyroid hormones and birth weight. A subset of 437 mother-newborn pairs were included from a prospective birth cohort with five parabens quantified in maternal urine and seven thyroid function indicators measured in cord serum samples. Multivariable linear regression models and elastic net regression (ENR) models were applied to explore associations between individual and mixtures of prenatal urinary paraben concentrations and thyroid hormones and birth weight, respectively. Maternal urinary ethyl-paraben (EtP) concentrations were associated with increased cord serum total triiodothyronine levels (TT3) [percent change: 1.51%; 95% confidence interval (CI): 0.20%, 2.74%; p =0.017]. Urinary propyl-paraben (PrP) levels predicted higher thyroid peroxidase antibodies (percent change: 4.19%, 95%CI: 0.20%, 8.44%; p =0.041). Maternal urinary EtP and butyl-paraben (BuP) concentrations were significantly positively associated with birth weight [regression coefficient, (β)=40.9g, 95%CI: 3.99, 76.6; p =0.030; β=62.1g, 95%CI: 8.70, 115; p =0.023, for EtP and BuP, respectively]. In sex-stratified analyses, positive relationship between EtP levels and birth weight was observed in boys. Urinary EtP concentrations predicted higher TT3 levels in cord serum samples, assessing parabens as a chemical mixture with ENR models. Prenatal exposure to parabens may affect thyroid hormone indicators with increased serum TT3 levels and associate with higher birth weight, especially in boys. The underlying biological mechanisms and effects of prenatal paraben exposures on disruption of thyroid function homeostasis and potential impacts of childhood growth and development needed to be further investigated. Image 1 • Maternal urinary EtP levels were associated with increased cord serum TT3 levels. • Urinary PrP levels were positively related to TPOAb levels in cord serum. • Prenatal exposure to EtP and BuP was associated with higher birth weight. • Sex-specific effects of EtP and BuP exposure on neonatal birth weight were observed. • EtP exposure contributes to higher serum TT3 levels with adjustment for other parabens. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00139351
Volume :
188
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Environmental Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
145443757
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envres.2020.109710