| Literature DB >> 30427191 |
Chuansha Wu1, Wei Xia1, Yuanyuan Li1, Jiufeng Li2, Bin Zhang3, Tongzhang Zheng4, Aifen Zhou3, Hongzhi Zhao2, Wenqian Huo5, Jie Hu1, Minmin Jiang1, Chen Hu1, Jiaqiang Liao1, Xi Chen1, Bing Xu1, Shi Lu6, Zongwei Cai2, Shunqing Xu1.
Abstract
Parabens are potential endocrine disruptors with short half-lives in the human body. To date, few epidemiological studies regarding repeated paraben measurements during pregnancy associated with fetal and childhood growth have been conducted. Within a Chinese prenatal cohort, 850 mother-infant pairs from whom a complete set of maternal urine samples were acquired during three trimesters were included, and the levels of five parabens were measured. We assessed the associations of both average and trimester-specific urinary paraben levels with weight and height z-scores at birth, 6 months, 1, and 2 years of age. In all infants, each doubling increase in average ethyl paraben (EtP) was associated with -2.82% (95% CI: -5.11%, -0.53%) decrease in weight z-score at birth, whereas no significant age-specific associations were identified. After stratifying by sex, we further observed age-specific association of average EtP with -3.96% (95% CI: -7.03%, -0.89%) and -3.38% (95% CI: 6.72%, -0.03%) reduction in weight z-scores at 1 and 2 years in males, respectively. Third-trimester EtP was negatively associated with weight z-scores at birth, 1 and 2 years in males. Our results suggested negative associations between prenatal paraben exposure and fetal and childhood growth, and the third trimester may be the window of susceptibility.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30427191 DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.8b01857
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Sci Technol ISSN: 0013-936X Impact factor: 9.028