| Literature DB >> 28982642 |
Pim Nicolaas Hubertus Wassenaar1, Leonardo Trasande2,3,4,5,6, Juliette Legler1,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Early-life exposure to bisphenol A (BPA) has been implicated to play a role in the development of obesity.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28982642 PMCID: PMC5933326 DOI: 10.1289/EHP1233
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health Perspect ISSN: 0091-6765 Impact factor: 9.031
PECO statement (population, exposure, comparator and outcomes).
| Variable | Description |
|---|---|
| Population | Experimental rodent studies |
| Exposure | Early-life exposure to bisphenol A (during gestation and/or lactation up to postnatal day 21) |
| Comparator | Animals exposed to vehicle-only treatment |
| Outcomes | Body weight, fat (pad) weights, triglyceride levels, free fatty acids levels and leptin levels |
Figure 2:Results of the risk of bias and methodological quality indicators for all included studies. The items in the Systematic Review Centre for Laboratory Animal Experimentation (SYRCLE) Risk of Bias assessment (Q1–Q10) were scored with “yes” indicating low risk of bias, “no” indicating high risk of bias, or “unclear” indicating that the item was not reported, resulting in an unknown risk of bias (Hooijmans et al. 2014). Q1–Q3 consider selection bias, Q4–Q5 consider performance bias, Q6–Q7 consider detection bias, Q8 considers attrition bias, Q9 considers reporting bias, and Q10 considers other biases. The overall study quality indicators (Q11–Q12) were scored with “yes” when reported or “no” when not reported. The methodological quality indicators focusing on potential intralitter correlation (Q13–Q14) were scored with “yes,” “no,” or “unclear.” Q, question. Q1: Was the allocation sequence adequately generated and applied?; Q2: Were the groups similar at baseline or were they adjusted for confounders in the analysis?; Q3: Was the allocation to the different groups adequately concealed?; Q4: Were the animals randomly housed during the experiment?; Q5: Were the caregivers and/or investigators blinded from knowledge which intervention each animal received during the experiment?; Q6: Were animals selected at random for outcome assessment?; Q7: Was the outcome assessor blinded?; Q8: Were incomplete outcome data adequately addressed?; Q9: Are reports of the study free of selective outcome reporting?; Q10: Was the study apparently free of other problems that could result in high risk of bias?; Q11: Was it stated that the experiment was randomized at any level?; Q12: Was it stated that the experiment was blinded at any level?; Q13: Was intralitter correlation controlled for by using the litter as statistical unit (instead of offspring)?; Q14: Was the study free of potential intralitter correlation caused by effects on litter size?
Figure 1:Flow chart of study selection process.
Effects of early-life exposure to bisphenol A on body weight from random effects meta-analyses.
| Analysis | Subgroups | MD (g) (95% CI) | No. studies (no. comparisons) | Test for subgroup differences | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overall | 86% | 55 (190) | |||
| Species | Rats | 86% | 35 (111) | ||
| Mice | 85% | 20 (79) | |||
| Strain | C57BL/6 (mice) | 0.11 ( | 83% | 5 (27) | |
| CD-1 (mice) | 0.19 ( | 67% | 4 (15) | ||
| CF-1 (mice) | 0.51 ( | 59% | 4 (11) | ||
| ICR (mice) | 85% | 3 (12) | |||
| F344 (rats) | 35% | 3 (11) | |||
| Long evans (rats) | 50% | 6 (12) | |||
| Sprague-Dawley (rats) | 87% | 16 (62) | |||
| Wistar (rats) | 8.16 (2.23, 14.09) | 92% | 8 (14) | ||
| Others | 84% | 7 (26) | |||
| Sex | Males | 86% | 46 (111) | ||
| Females | 86% | 34 (79) | |||
| Time window of exposure | Perinatal | 0.09 ( | 84% | 36 (127) | |
| Prenatal | 0.02 ( | 82% | 11 (40) | ||
| Postnatal | 89% | 9 (23) | |||
| Frequency of exposure | Daily | 85% | 40 (128) | ||
| Constant | 0.99 (0.37, 1.61) | 88% | 15 (62) | ||
| Route of exposure | Gavage | 76% | 15 (48) | ||
| Oral | 88% | 11 (40) | |||
| Diet | 0.08 ( | 79% | 8 (49) | ||
| Drinking water | 4.67 (2.17, 7.17) | 91% | 9 (22) | ||
| Subcutaneous | 89% | 12 (31) | |||
| Dose of exposure | 0.16 ( | 87% | 35 (72) | ||
| 86% | 35 (112) | ||||
| Time of outcome measure | PND0−PND21 | 81% | 18 (59) | ||
| 0.49 ( | 87% | 47 (131) |
Note: Effect sizes are expressed as the MD in grams with 95% CIs calculated using random effects models. From each study, we considered each analysis with a specific dose, sex, and/or time window of exposure as a separate individual comparison. is a measure of heterogeneity. Positive MDs represent an increase in the outcome measure after exposure. Negative MDs represent a decrease in the outcome measure after exposure. Tests for subgroup differences were conducted using Review Manager [RevMan v5.3 (The Cochrane Community)]. CI, confidence interval; MD, mean difference; PND, postnatal day.
Includes OF-1, NMRI, and Avy Agouti mice and Donryu, Alderley Park, and Holtzman rats.
The results from Anderson et al. (2013) were excluded from this analysis because exposure was expressed as diet concentration, and it was not possible to estimate dose concentrations.
Effects of early-life exposure to bisphenol A on fat weight from random effects meta-analyses.
| Analysis | Subgroups | SMD (95% CI) | No. studies (no. comparisons) | Test for subgroup differences | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overall | 0.67 (0.53, 0.81) | 46% | 13 (117) | ||
| Species | Rats | 1.12 (0.71, 1.52) | 66% | 4 (19) | |
| Mice | 0.57 (0.44, 0.71) | 36% | 9 (98) | ||
| Strain | C57BL/6 (mice) | 0.71 (0.56, 0.85) | 0% | 3 (52) | |
| CD-1 (mice) | 0.18 ( | 15% | 3 (28) | ||
| Sprague-Dawley (rats) | 1.06 (0.63, 1.48) | 68% | 3 (17) | ||
| Others | 0.99 (0.46, 1.51) | 76% | 4 (20) | ||
| Sex | Males | 0.69 (0.56, 0.81) | 19% | 13 (86) | |
| Females | 0.52 (0.11, 0.93) | 72% | 9 (31) | ||
| Time window of exposure | Perinatal | 0.65 (0.51, 0.79) | 37% | 10 (95) | |
| Prenatal | 0.81 (0.43, 1.19) | 67% | 3 (22) | ||
| Frequency of exposure | Daily | 0.91 (0.61, 1.21) | 68% | 5 (36) | |
| Constant | 0.58 (0.44, 0.72) | 23% | 8 (81) | ||
| Route of exposure | Diet | 0.57 (0.43, 0.71) | 13% | 5 (70) | |
| Drinking water | 0.68 (0.21, 1.15) | 58% | 3 (11) | ||
| Others | 0.91 (0.61, 1.21) | 68% | 5 (36) | ||
| Dose of exposure | 0.76 (0.55, 0.97) | 38% | 9 (53) | ||
| 0.70 (0.52, 0.88) | 43% | 7 (58) | |||
| Fat pads | Retroperitoneal fat | 0.68 ( | 45% | 3 (7) | |
| (Peri)gonadal fat | 0.72 (0.36, 1.07) | 65% | 8 (27) | ||
| (Peri)renal fat | 0.63 (0.36, 0.89) | 34% | 5 (20) | ||
| Mesenteric fat | 0.82 (0.55, 1.10) | 0% | 4 (14) | ||
| Brown adipose tissue | 0.94 (0.47, 1.41) | 52% | 4 (15) | ||
| Total fat | 0.35 ( | 70% | 4 (14) | ||
| Others | 0.67 (0.42, 0.92) | 0% | 3 (20) |
Note: Effect sizes are expressed as the SMD with 95% CIs calculated using random effects models. From each study, we considered each analysis with a specific dose, sex, and/or time window of exposure as a separate individual comparison, as well as analyses of different fat pads (even when derived from the same animal). is a measure of heterogeneity. Positive SMDs represent an increase in the outcome measure after exposure. Negative SMDs represent a decrease in the outcome measure after exposure. Tests for subgroup differences were conducted using Review Manager [RevMan v5.3 (The Cochrane Community)]. CI, confidence interval; SMD, standardized mean difference.
Results of Anderson et al. (2013) were excluded from this analysis because exposure was expressed as diet concentration, and it was not possible to estimate dose concentrations.
Includes OF-1, MF-1, and Avy Agouti mice and Wistar rats.
Includes subcutaneous, oral, and gavage exposure.
Includes mammary and subcutaneous fat pads.
Effects of early-life exposure to bisphenol A on triglyceride levels from random effects meta-analyses.
| Analysis | Subgroups | SMD (95% CI) | No. studies (no. comparisons) | Test for subgroup differences | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overall | 0.97 (0.53, 1.40) | 58% | 8 (18) | ||
| Species | Rats | 1.34 (0.44, 2.24) | 74% | 5 (8) | |
| Mice | 0.73 (0.32, 1.15) | 27% | 3 (10) | ||
| Strain | Wistar (rats) | 2.00 (0.98, 3.02) | 60% | 3 (5) | |
| Others | 0.63 (0.24, 1.02) | 37% | 5 (13) | ||
| Sex | Males | 1.16 (0.69, 1.63) | 55% | 7 (15) | |
| Females | 0.05 ( | 0% | 3 (3) | ||
| Dose of exposure | 1.45 (0.78, 2.13) | 63% | 6 (10) | ||
| 0.45 (0.04, 0.87) | 18% | 4 (8) | |||
| Compartment | Serum/plasma | 0.76 (0.39, 1.13) | 34% | 6 (14) | |
| Hepatic | 1.94 (0.10, 3.79) | 83% | 3 (4) |
Note: Effect sizes are expressed as the SMD with 95% CIs calculated using random effects models. From each study, we considered each analysis with a specific dose, sex, and/or time window of exposure as a separate individual comparison. is a measure of heterogeneity. Positive SMDs represent an increase in the outcome measure after exposure. Negative SMDs represent a decrease in the outcome measure after exposure. Tests for subgroup differences were conducted using Review Manager [RevMan v5.3 (The Cochrane Community)]. CI, confidence interval; SMD, standardized mean difference.
Includes OF-1 and C57BL/6JxFVB mice and Sprague-Dawley rats.
Effects of early-life exposure to bisphenol A on free fatty acid levels from random effects meta-analyses.
| Analysis | Subgroups | SMD (95% CI) | No. studies (no. comparisons) | Test for subgroup differences | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overall | 0.86 (0.50, 1.22) | 36% | 7 (17) | ||
| Species | Rats | 0.76 (0.08, 1.43) | 53% | 5 (7) | |
| Mice | 0.94 (0.52, 1.36) | 22% | 3 (10) | ||
| Strain | Wistar (rats) | 0.99 ( | 68% | 3 (4) | |
| Others | 0.84 (0.48, 1.20) | 23% | 5 (13) | ||
| Sex | Males | 1.24 (0.88, 1.59) | 0% | 5 (11) | |
| Females | 0.14 ( | 0% | 3 (6) | ||
| Frequency of exposure | Daily | 0.97 (0.15, 1.78) | 61% | 5 (7) | |
| Constant | 0.84 (0.48, 1.19) | 5% | 3 (10) | ||
| Dose of exposure | 1.57 (1.05, 2.09) | 0% | 4 (6) | ||
| 0.53 (0.19, 0.87) | 0% | 4 (11) | |||
| Time of outcome measure | PND0−PND21 | 0.38 ( | 27% | 3 (4) | |
| 1.02 (0.61, 1.42) | 32% | 5 (13) | |||
| Compartment | Serum/plasma | 0.97 (0.65, 1.30) | 0% | 5 (12) | |
| Others | 0.63 ( | 66% | 3 (5) |
Note: Effect sizes are expressed as the SMD with 95% CIs calculated using random effects models. From each study, we considered each analysis with a specific dose, sex, and/or time window of exposure as a separate individual comparison. is a measure of heterogeneity. Positive SMDs represent an increase in the outcome measure after exposure. Negative SMDs represent a decrease in the outcome measure after exposure. Tests for subgroup differences were conducted using Review Manager [RevMan v5.3 (The Cochrane Community)]. CI, confidence interval; PND, postnatal day; SMD, standardized mean difference.
Includes OF-1, Avi Agouti, and C57BL/6JxFVB mice and Sprague-Dawley rats.
Includes hepatic and fat tissue.
Effects of early-life exposure to bisphenol A on leptin levels from random effects meta-analyses.
| Analysis | Subgroups | No. studies (no. comparisons) | Test for subgroup differences | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overall | 0.37 ( | 50% | 8 (34) | ||
| Species | Rats | 64% | 3 (10) | ||
| Mice | 0.72 (0.09, 1.35) | 43% | 5 (24) | ||
| Sex | Males | 0.69 (0.14, 1.25) | 46% | 8 (24) | |
| Females | 60% | 5 (10) | |||
| Time window of exposure | Perinatal | 0.46 ( | 50% | 5 (23) | |
| Prenatal | 0.26 ( | 51% | 3 (11) | ||
| Frequency of exposure | Daily | 59% | 5 (17) | ||
| Constant | 0.75 (0.10, 1.41) | 38% | 3 (17) | ||
| Route of exposure | Gavage | 63% | 3 (10) | ||
| Diet | 0.75 (0.10, 1.41) | 38% | 3 (17) | ||
| Dose of exposure | 0.18 ( | 51% | 7 (20) | ||
| 0.82 ( | 67% | 3 (8) |
Note: Effect sizes are expressed as the MD in ng/ml with 95% CIs calculated using random effects models. From each study, we considered each analysis with a specific dose, sex, and/or time window of exposure as a separate individual comparison. is a measure of heterogeneity. Positive MDs represent an increase in the outcome measure after exposure. Negative MDs represent a decrease in the outcome measure after exposure. Tests for subgroup differences were conducted using Review Manager RevMan v5.3 (The Cochrane Community)]. CI, confidence interval; MD, mean difference.
Measurements of Angle et al. (2013; oral exposure, five comparisons) and Alonso-Magdalena et al. (2010; subcutaneous exposure, two comparisons) were excluded from this subgroup analysis because there were not three studies that could be included in an “Others” subgroup.
Results of Anderson et al. (2013) were excluded from this analysis because exposure was expressed as diet concentration, and it was not possible to estimate dose concentrations.
Results of the sensitivity analyses on the overall effects of early-life exposure to bisphenol A on body weight, fat weight, triglycerides, free fatty acids, and leptin.
| Outcome measure | Effect size | Overall effect | 1 | 2 | 3 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Effect | No. studies/ | Effect | No. studies/ | Effect | No. studies/ | |||
| Body weight | MD | 0.17 ( | 55/78% | 42/84% | 33/83% | |||
| Fat weight | SMD | 0.67 (0.53, 0.81) | 0.66 (0.52, 0.80) | 13/46% | 0.63 (0.48, 0.78) | 9/38% | 0.62 (0.32, 0.91) | 8/60% |
| Triglycerides | SMD | 0.97 (0.53, 1.40) | — | — | 0.89 (0.41, 1.37) | 4/56% | 1.58 (0.65, 2.52) | 4/69% |
| Free fatty acids | SMD | 0.86 (0.50, 1.22) | — | — | 0.76 (0.40, 1.11) | 4/24% | 0.59 ( | 4/56% |
| Leptin | MD | 0.37 ( | — | — | 0.39 ( | 7/52% | 6/55% | |
Note: Effect sizes are expressed as the SMD or as the MD with 95% CIs. Positive SMDs and MDs represent an increase in the outcome measure after exposure. Negative SMDs and MDs represent a decrease in the outcome measure after exposure. Results of the three sensitivity analyses are provided: ; ; . —, Analysis could not be conducted; CI, confidence interval; MD, mean difference; SMD, standardized mean difference.
Quality of the evidence of the overall effects of bisphenol A on the investigated obesity related outcome measures using the Office of Health Assessment and Translation confidence rating methodology (NTP 2015).
| Outcome measure | Body of evidence (animal studies) | Factors for downgrading | Factors for upgrading | Final confidence rating | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Risk of bias | Unexplained inconsistency | Indirectness | Imprecision | Publication bias | Magnitude | Dose response | Residual confounding | Consistency species | |||
| Body weight | Initial high confidence (55 studies) | –– | –– | –– | –– | –– | –– | –– | Low | ||
| Fat weight | Initial high confidence (13 studies) | –– | –– | –– | –– | –– | –– | –– | Low | ||
| Triglyceride | Initial high confidence (8 studies) | –– | –– | –– | –– | –– | –– | –– | Low | ||
| Free fatty acids | Initial high confidence (7 studies) | –– | –– | –– | –– | –– | –– | Low to Moderate | |||
| Leptin | Initial high confidence (8 studies) | –– | –– | –– | –– | –– | –– | –– | Low | ||
Note: –, no concern, or not present; , serious concern; , sufficient to upgrade evidence.
The factors “large effect magnitude” and “residual confounding” were not assessed in this study and consequently were not used to upgrade the evidence.
Serious concern because of many “unclear” scores and a change in direction of the association after sensitivity analyses.
Serious concern because of varying point estimates, minimal or no overlap of confidence intervals between studies, and substantial heterogeneity ().
No strongly suspected publication bias observed.
Indications for dose–response effects either within or across studies, but the consistency of these indications was not considered sufficient to upgrade the confidence.
Serious concern because of many “unclear” scores.
Serious concern because of varying point estimates and minimal overlap of confidence intervals between studies.
Serious concern because of varying point estimates and moderate heterogeneity ().
Serious concern because of varying point estimates.
No subgroup differences were estimated across species and strains.
Body of evidence was already downgraded for unexplained inconsistency and additional downgrading for imprecision was not considered appropriate (NTP 2015).