4.7 Article

Prenatal Triclosan Exposure and Anthropometric Measures Including Anogenital Distance in Danish Infants

期刊

ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH PERSPECTIVES
卷 124, 期 8, 页码 1261-1268

出版社

US DEPT HEALTH HUMAN SCIENCES PUBLIC HEALTH SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1289/ehp.1409637

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资金

  1. Danish Center for Hormone Disrupting Chemicals
  2. Danish Research Council [4004-00352B_FSS]
  3. Danish Foundation for Scientific Innovation and Technology [09-067180]
  4. Ronald McDonald Child Foundation
  5. K.A. Rohde and Wife's Foundation
  6. Odense University Hospital and Region of Southern Denmark
  7. Danielsen Foundation
  8. Danish Council for Strategic Research
  9. Program Commission on Health, Food and Welfare [2101-08-0058]
  10. Health Insurance Foundation
  11. Odense Patient data Exploratory Network (OPEN)
  12. Velux Foundation
  13. Augustinus Foundation
  14. Svend Andersen Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

BACKGROUND: Triclosan (TCS) is widely used as an antibacterial agent in consumer products such as hand soap and toothpaste, and human exposure is widespread. TCS is suspected of having endocrine-disrupting properties, but few human studies have examined the developmental effects of prenatal TCS exposure. OBJECTIVES: We prospectively examined associations between prenatal TCS exposure and anthropometric measures at birth and anogenital distance (AGD) at 3 months of age. METHODS: Pregnant women from the Odense Child Cohort (n = 514) provided urine samples at approximately gestational week 28 (median 28.7 weeks, range 26.4-34.0), and urinary TCS concentration was measured by isotope dilution TurboFlow-liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. Multiple linear regression analysis was used to examine associations between prenatal TCS exposure and measures of size at birth (birth weight, length, head and abdominal circumference) and AGD at 3 months of age (median 3.3 months, range 2.3-6.7 months), controlling for potential confounders. RESULTS: Newborn boys in the highest quartile of prenatal TCS exposure had a 0.7-cm [95% confidence interval (CI): -1.2, -0.1, p = 0.01] smaller head circumference than boys in the lowest quartile. Additionally in boys, inverse associations of borderline statistical significance were observed between prenatal TCS exposure and abdominal circumference at birth and AGD at 3 months of age (p-values < 0.10). Prenatal TCS exposure was not significantly associated with any of the outcomes in girls. However, AGD was measured in fewer girls, and we observed no significant interactions between a child's sex and prenatal TCS exposure in anthropometric measures at birth. CONCLUSION: Prenatal TCS exposure was associated with reduced head and abdominal circumference at birth and with reduced AGD at 3 months of age in boys, although the last two findings were statistically nonsignificant. These findings require replication but are compatible with an anti-androgenic effect of prenatal TCS exposure on fetal growth in boys.

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