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Thứ Ba, 16 tháng 6, 2015

PHTHALATES IN PREGNANCY MAY HARM BABY BOYS


Exposure to hormone-altering chemicals called phthalates in early pregnancy is associated with a disruption in an essential pregnancy hormone, report researchers.
In addition, their study suggests this exposure adversely affects the masculinization of male babies’ genitals.
Phthalates are found in many plastics, food, and personal care products.
The findings, presented today at the Endocrine Society’s 97th annual meeting in San Diego, focus on the role of the placenta in responding to these chemicals and altering levels of a key pregnancy hormone.
The results suggest that there may be reason to push routine clinical testing earlier in pregnancy to check for the effects of chemicals and help guide potential interventions to protect the health of the baby.
“Phthalates are pervasive,” says Jennifer Adibi, assistant professor of epidemiology at University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public Health. “Reducing exposure to phthalates and other hormone-disrupting chemicals is something that needs to be addressed at a societal level through consumer advocacy and regulation, and education of health care providers.”

INFORMATION FROM THE PLACENTA

The research builds on a study led by Shanna S. Swan of the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai that was published in February in the journal Human Reproduction.
Swan is senior investigator of this presentation, which provides new information about how phthalates target a key pregnancy hormone called human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG), which is made by the placenta and can be measured in the mother’s blood and urine.
“The placenta, which is an extension of the fetus and a target of the chemicals in our bodies, broadcasts information early in pregnancy, through hCG, about what might be occurring to the fetus from chemical exposure,” says Adibi.
“With a simple blood or urine test, doctors and pregnant women may be able to act on this information to reduce exposure and improve the long-term health of the future child.”
Adibi and her colleagues analyzed data collected from approximately 350 women and their babies who participated in a multicenter investigation called The Infant Development and the Environment Study (TIDES). Between 2010 and 2012, the women gave blood and urine samples in their first trimester of pregnancy and allowed researchers to take measurements of the babies at birth.
Higher levels of two molecules that are produced when phthalates are digested—mono-n-butyl and monobenzyl phthalate—in the mothers’ urine early in pregnancy were significantly associated with lower levels of hCG in women carrying male babies and with higher hCG in those carrying female babies.

EFFECTS ON MALE BABIES

The new research also looks at hCG in relation to a biological marker called anogenital distance, which is the distance between the anus and genitals. In men, a short anogenital distance is associated with decreased sperm count and infertility.
Higher levels of hCG in the mother’s blood were associated with a shorter anogenital distance in male babies. The researchers estimate that about 20 to 30 percent of the phthalate effect on the babies’ genitals could be attributed to the influence of phthalates on hCG, specifically mono-n-butyl and mono-ethylhexyl phthalate.
“Our study is the first to look at hCG as a target of phthalate exposure in pregnancy,” says Adibi. “There is growing societal concern over pediatric disorders that have a basis in the fetal period and which may be more common in one sex or another, such as autism, attention deficit disorder, obesity, asthma, and infertility.
“It is important to find out if chemicals in our food or environment might influence these conditions.”
The participants in this study enrolled at prenatal clinics in California, Washington, Minnesota, and New York. Adibi is looking ahead to future studies in which she will enroll women in the earliest stages of pregnancy at clinics in Pittsburgh to assess exposures to endocrine disruptors and measure effects on the placenta and the baby.
Additional researchers contributed from University of Pittsburgh; McGill University; University of Rochester; University of Minnesota; University of Washington; and University of California, San Francisco.
The National Institutes of Environmental Health Sciences funded the study and TIDES.

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