| Literature DB >> 32455625 |
Inger-Lise Steffensen1, Hubert Dirven1, Stephan Couderq2, Arthur David3, Shereen Cynthia D'Cruz3, Mariana F Fernández4,5, Vicente Mustieles4,5, Andrea Rodríguez-Carillo4, Tim Hofer1.
Abstract
Bisphenols, particularly bisphenol A (4,4'-(hexafluoroisopropylidene)-diphenol) (BPA), are suspected of inducing oxidative stress in humans, which may be associated with adverse health outcomes. We investigated the associations between exposure to bisphenols and biomarkers of oxidative stress in human studies over the last 12 years (2008‒2019) related to six health endpoints and evaluated their suitability as effect biomarkers. PubMed database searches identified 27 relevant articles that were used for data extraction. In all studies, BPA exposure was reported, whereas some studies also reported other bisphenols. More than a dozen different biomarkers were measured. The most frequently measured biomarkers were 8-oxo-7,8-dihydro-2'-deoxyguanosine (8-OHdG), 8-iso-prostaglandin F2α (8-isoprostane) and malondialdehyde (MDA), which almost always were positively associated with BPA. Methodological issues were reported for MDA, mainly the need to handle samples with caution to avoid artefact formation and its measurements using a chromatographic step to distinguish it from similar aldehydes, making some of the MDA results less reliable. Urinary 8-OHdG and 8-isoprostane can be considered the most reliable biomarkers of oxidative stress associated with BPA exposure. Although none of the biomarkers are considered BPA- or organ-specific, the biomarkers can be assessed repeatedly and non-invasively in urine and could help to understand causal relationships.Entities:
Keywords: 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal-mercapturic acid (HNE-MA); HBM4EU; adverse outcome pathway (AOP); analytical methods; antioxidant; bisphenol F (BPF); bisphenol S (BPS); effect biomarker; reactive nitrogen species (RNS); reactive oxygen species (ROS)
Year: 2020 PMID: 32455625 PMCID: PMC7277872 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17103609
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Commonly measured biomarkers of oxidative stress after BPA exposure in humans.
Used in the two Pubmed database searches performed at the turn of the year 2017–2018 (limited to years 2008–2017) and on 3 January, 2020, for the years 2018–2019.
| Health Endpoint | Bisphenol AND (MeSH Terms OR synonym) |
|---|---|
| Behavior, neurodevelopment, and neurodegeneration | (Bisphenol) AND (((((((((((((“Behavior”[Mesh]) OR (“Behavior and Behavior Mechanisms”[Mesh] OR “Reproductive Behavior”[Mesh])) OR “Social Behavior Disorders”[Mesh]) OR (“Child Behavior Disorders”[Mesh] OR “Adolescent Behavior”[Mesh])) OR “Antisocial Personality Disorder”[Mesh]) OR (“Infant Behavior”[Mesh] OR “Spatial Behavior”[Mesh])) OR “Sucking Behavior”[Mesh]) OR (“Sexual Behavior, Animal”[Mesh] OR “Sexual Behavior”[Mesh])) OR (“Paternal Behavior”[Mesh] OR “Maternal Behavior”[Mesh] OR “Impulsive Behavior”[Mesh] OR “Feeding Behavior”[Mesh] OR “Exploratory Behavior”[Mesh])) OR (“Compulsive Behavior”[Mesh] OR “Child Behavior”[Mesh] OR “Behavior, Animal”[Mesh])) OR “Mental Disorders”[Mesh])) OR (Behavior OR Neurobehavior OR Neurodevelopment OR Neurology OR Parkinson OR Alzheimer OR Autism OR Hyperactivity OR ASD OR ADHD OR mental retardation OR IQ loss OR internalizing OR externalizing)) |
| Cancer | (Bisphenol) AND (((((((“Neoplasms”[Mesh] OR “Uterine Cervical Neoplasms”[Mesh] OR “Urologic Neoplasms”[Mesh] OR “Liver Neoplasms”[Mesh] OR “Hereditary Breast and Ovarian Cancer Syndrome”[Mesh] OR “Early Detection of Cancer”[Mesh]) OR (“Urogenital Neoplasms”[Mesh] OR “Testicular Neoplasms”[Mesh] OR “Endometrial Neoplasms”[Mesh] OR “Vaginal Neoplasms”[Mesh] OR “Uterine Neoplasms”[Mesh])) OR (“Prostatic Neoplasms”[Mesh] OR “Ovarian Neoplasms”[Mesh] OR “Endocrine Gland Neoplasms”[Mesh])) OR (“Breast Neoplasms”[Mesh] OR “Neoplasms, Germ Cell and Embryonal”[Mesh] OR “Tumor Microenvironment”[Mesh])) OR (“Thyroid Neoplasms”[Mesh] OR “Pituitary Neoplasms”[Mesh] OR “Brain Neoplasms”[Mesh]))) OR (Cancer OR hormone-dependent cancer OR neoplasm OR malignant tumor OR tumor OR tumour) OR (Colon neoplasms)) |
| Endocrine diseases | (Bisphenol) AND (“Endocrine System”[Mesh] OR “Endocrine Glands”[Mesh] OR “Endocrine System Diseases”[Mesh] OR “Hormones”[Mesh] OR “Gonadal Hormones”[Mesh] OR “Placental Hormones”[Mesh] OR “Pituitary Hormones”[Mesh] OR “Growth Hormone”[Mesh] OR “Thyroid Hormones”[Mesh] OR “Gastrointestinal Hormones”[Mesh] OR “Sex Hormone-Binding Globulin”[Mesh] OR “Adrenocorticotropic Hormone”[Mesh] OR “Adrenal Cortex Hormones”[Mesh] OR Endocrine system OR hypothyroidism OR hyperthyroidism OR adrenal) |
| Immune system and allergy | (bisphenol) AND (“Allergy and Immunology”[Mesh] OR “Hypersensitivity”[Mesh] OR “Rhinitis, Allergic, Seasonal”[Mesh] OR “Food Hypersensitivity”[Mesh] OR “Drug Hypersensitivity”[Mesh] OR “Shellfish Hypersensitivity”[Mesh] OR Allergy OR Hypersensitive OR respiratory allergy OR gastrointestinal allergy OR multiple chemical sensitivity OR allergic hypersensitivity disease OR contact allergy OR “Immune System”[Mesh] OR “Immune System Diseases”[Mesh] OR Immune system OR autoimmune disease OR cytokines OR white cells OR innate immune system OR adaptive immune system) |
| Obesity, metabolic disorders and cardiovascular diseases | (Bisphenol) AND (“Metabolic Syndrome”[Mesh] OR “Nutritional and Metabolic Diseases”[Mesh] OR “Metabolic Diseases”[Mesh] OR “Metabolism”[Mesh] OR “Glucose Metabolism Disorders”[Mesh] OR “Acidosis”[Mesh] OR “Metabolome”[Mesh] OR “Metabolomics”[Mesh] OR “Receptor, Insulin”[Mesh] OR “Lipolysis”[Mesh] OR “Gout”[Mesh] OR “Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2”[Mesh] OR “Acidosis, Renal Tubular”[Mesh] OR “Homocysteinemia” [Supplementary Concept] OR “Peroxisome Proliferator-Activated Receptor Gamma Coactivator 1-alpha”[Mesh] OR “Obesity”[Mesh] OR “Pediatric Obesity”[Mesh] OR “Obesity, Abdominal”[Mesh] OR “Abdominal obesity metabolic syndrome” [Supplementary Concept] OR “Cardiovascular System”[Mesh] OR “Cardiovascular Abnormalities”[Mesh] OR “Pregnancy Complications, Cardiovascular”[Mesh] OR “Cardiovascular Diseases”[Mesh] OR “Myocardial Infarction”[Mesh] OR obesity OR abdominal obesity OR waist hip ratio OR adipose tissue OR adypokine OR visceral fat OR body fat OR overweight OR Metabolic OR Metabolic disorder OR Metabolic syndrome OR glucose homeostasis OR Hyperlipidemia OR Dyslipidemia OR hypertriglyceridemia OR HOMA-IR OR insulin resistance OR pancreas OR liver OR kidney) |
| Reproductive diseases | (Bisphenol) AND (reproductive OR puberty OR pregnancy OR infertility OR semen quality OR placenta OR anogenital distance OR hypospadia OR cryptorchidism OR “Reproductive Health”[Mesh] OR “Reproductive Medicine”[Mesh] OR “Reproduction”[Mesh] OR “Reproductive Techniques, Assisted”[Mesh] OR “Infertility”[Mesh]) |
On 27 January, 2020, a complementary PubMed search using the broad search terms “bisphenol AND oxidative stress, AND biomarker” was performed.
Human studies on bisphenols and biomarkers of oxidative stress during years 2008‒2019.
| Study Design | Population Groups | Bisphenols | Oxidative Stress Effect Biomarkers (Source) | Outcomes | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Prospective cohort (Italy) | NAFLD * ( | BPA (plasma and urine) | TBARS, SOD, CAT (all in serum) | The NAFLD patients had higher plasma ( | Dallio 2017 [ |
| Case-control (China) | ADHD ( | BPA (urine) | 8-OHdG (urine) | ADHD children had significantly higher urinary BPA ( | Li 2018 [ |
| Case-control (Egypt) | Children ASD ( | BPA (serum) | 8-OHdG (serum) | Both BPA ( | Metwally 2018 [ |
| Case-control (Turkey) | Children with classic autism ( | BPA (plasma) | TBARS and protein carbonyls (plasma). | The PDD-NOS group had higher BPA levels than both control ( | Kondolot 2016 [ |
| Case-control (Turkey) | COPD patients ( | BPA (serum) | MDA and total thiols (serum) | In the serum of COPD patients, BPA concentrations were significantly higher ( | Erden 2014 [ |
| Case-control (Egypt) | Infertile male patients ( | BPA (urine) | Total antioxidant activity and MDA in seminal cell-free plasma | BPA concentrations were similar, MDA levels higher ( | Omran 2018 [ |
| Intervention (single-blind randomized clinical trial) (South Korea) | Young women investigated for gynecological complaints given KRG ( | BPA (urine) | MDA (urine) | Urinary total BPA and MDA levels were positively associated (slope = 0.88, r2 = 0.10, | Yang 2014 [ |
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| Nested case-control with repeated measurements of exposure and outcomes during pregnancy (USA) | Pregnant women ( | BPA (urine) | 8-OHdG and 8-isoprostane (both urine), up to four measurements | In adjusted models, an IQR increase in BPA was associated with significant increases in oxidative stress biomarkers, 5% in 8-OHdG ( | Ferguson 2016 [ |
| Cohort with repeated measurements of exposure and outcomes during pregnancy (Puerto Rico) | Pregnant women ( | BPA (urine) | 8-OHdG and 8-isoprostane (both urine), three measurements | An IQR range increase in BPA was associated with 29% higher 8-isoprostane ( | Watkins 2015 [ |
| Prospective pregnancy cohort (USA) | Pregnant women ( | uBPA and BPA-G (blood plasma) | 3-NO2Tyr, 3-ClTyr, and diTyr (all in plasma) | A positive association between BPA (as BPA-G: r = 0.440, | Veiga-Lopez 2015 [ |
| Cross-sectional within a pregnancy cohort (Taiwan) | Study on mother/fetus pairs ( | BPA (urine) | 8-OHdG, 8-NO2Gua, 8-isoprostane and HNE-MA levels in 3rd trimester maternal urine. GPx in maternal and umbilical cord blood plasma | Positive associations between maternal BPA and 8-isoprostane levels (β = 4.5, | Huang 2017 [ |
| Cross-sectional within a pregnancy cohort (Taiwan) | Pregnant women ( | BPA (urine) | 8-OHdG, 8-NO2Gua, 8-isoprostane, and HNE-MA (all urinary) | A significant but weak correlation was observed between maternal BPA and 8-isoprostane (r = 0.17, | Chang 2019 [ |
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| Longitudinal cohort with repeated measurements (China) | School children ( | BPA, BPB, BPAF, BPAP, BPE, BPF, BPP, BPS, BPZ (all in urine) | 8-OHdG and 8-OHG (both in urine) | An IQR increase in BPA was associated with 12.9% ( | Zhou 2019 [ |
| Cross-sectional (Brazil) | Urban resident children ( | BPA, BPS, BPAP, BPB, BPP, BPF, BPAF, BPZ, and BPM (all in urine) | 8-OHdG (urine) | Significant association between urinary 8-OHdG and BPA (r = 0.261, | Rocha 2018 [ |
| Cross-sectional (Italy) | School children aged 7‒19 years ( | GlcA-BPA (urine) | 8-isoprostane (urine) | A significant association between 8-isoprostane and GlcA-BPA was found, but only from ≥6 ng/mg creatinine ( | Bono 2019 [ |
| Cross-sectional (China) | Children aged 3‒6 years | BPA (urine) | 8-OHdG (urine) | A significant positive association was found (r = 0.240, | Lv 2016 [ |
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| Cross-sectional (with repeated measurements) (China) | Healthy Chinese men ( | BPA, BPF, BPS (all in urine) | 8-OHdG, 8-isoprostane, and HNE-MA (all in urine) | BPA was positively associated with 8-OHdG (r = 0.19, | Wang 2019 [ |
| Cross-sectional (South Korea) | Urban residing adults ( | BPA (urine) | 8-OHdG and MDA (both in urine) | 8-OHdG and MDA levels were not significantly associated with BPA in Korean urban residing adults | Hong 2009 [ |
| Cross-sectional (South Korea) | Adult men ( | BPA (urine) | 8-OHdG and MDA (urine) | BPA was positively associated with MDA (β = 0.056‒0.066, | Yang 2009 [ |
| Cross-sectional (Saudi Arabia) | Healthy persons ( | BPA, BPAF, BPAP, BPS, BPF, BPP, BPZ, and BPB (all in urine) | 8-OHdG (urine) | BPA (r = 0.38, | Asimakopoulos 2016 [ |
| Cross-sectional (Singapore) | Healthy participants ( | BPA, BPS, several BADGEs (urine) | 8-OHdG (urine) | 8-OHdG levels were positively correlated with BPA levels (r = 0.353, | Liu 2019 [ |
| Cross-sectional (South Korea) | General population ( | BPA (serum and urine) | bilirubin (serum) | An inverse association between urinary BPA and serum bilirubin levels (β = −0.071, | Choi 2019 [ |
| Intervention (South Korea) | Young women ( | BPA (urine) | 8-OHdG and MDA (urine) | BPA concentrations were positively associated with MDA levels (slope = 0.85, | Yi 2011 [ |
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| Prospective cohort with repeated measurements (South Korea) | Elderly ( | BPA (urine) | SNPs in | Significant associations of BPA with abnormal liver function were found in Koreans with certain polymorphisms in genes associated with oxidative stress, such as | Kim 2016 [ |
| Prospective cohort with repeated measurements (South Korea) | Elderly ( | BPA (urine) | SNPs in | A significant positive association was found between urinary BPA and MDA in both sexes (males: β = 0.19 and | Kim and Hong 2017 [ |
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| Cross-sectional (China) | Residents ( | BPA, BPAF, BPAP, BPS, BPF, BPP, BPZ, and BPB (all in urine) | 8-OHdG (urine) | In the e-waste dismantling location, urinary BPA (r = 0.413, | Zhang 2016 [ |
* Abbreviations: attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), autism spectrum disorders (ASD), bisphenol A diglycidyl ethers (BADGEs), bisphenol A (4,4′-isopropylidenediphenol) (BPA), bisphenol AF (4,4′-(hexafluoroisopropylidene)-diphenol) (BPAF), BPA glucuronide (BPA-G), bisphenol AP (4,4′-(1-phenylethylidene)bisphenol) (BPAP), bisphenol B (2,2-Bis(4-hydroxyphenyl)butane) (BPB), bisphenol E (1,1-bis(4-hydroxyphenyl)ethane) (BPE), bisphenol F (4,4′-dihydroxydiphenylmethane) (BPF), bisphenol M (4,4′-(1,3-phenylenediisopropylidene)bisphenol) (BPM), bisphenol P (4,4′-(1,4-phenylenediisopropylidene)bisphenol) (BPP), bisphenol S (4,4′-sulfonyldiphenol) (BPS), bisphenol Z (4,4′-cyclohexylidenebisphenol) (BPZ), catalase (CAT), catalase gene (CAT), 3-chloro-tyrosine (3-ClTyr), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), cyclooxygenase 2 gene (COX2), C-reactive protein (CRP), o,o’-di-tyrosine (diTyr), deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), dopamine receptor D2 gene gene (DRD2), endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs), endothelial nitric oxide synthase gene (eNOS), epoxidehydrolase 1 gene (EPHX1)glucuronic acid of BPA (GlcA-BPA), glutathione peroxidase (GPx, GPx1), glutathione reductase (GR), glutathione (GSH), 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal-mercapturic acid (HNE-MA), heat shock protein 70-hom gene (HSP70-hom), interleukin 1β (IL-1β), interleukin-6 (IL-6), interleukin-10 (IL-10), interquartile range (IQR), 8-iso-prostaglandin F2α (8-isoprostane), Korean red ginseng (KRG), malondialdehyde (MDA), myeloperoxidase gene (MPO), non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), non-alcoholic fatty liver (NAFL), non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), 8-nitro-guanine (8-NO2Gua), 3-nitro-tyrosine (3-NO2Tyr), 8-oxo-7,8-dihydro-2′-deoxyguanosine (8-OHdG), 8-oxo-7,8-dihydroguanosine (8-OHG), pervasive developmental disorder—not otherwise specified (PDD-NOS), paraoxonase 1 gene (PON1), selenium (Se), single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), superoxide dismutase (SOD), superoxide dismutase 2 gene (SOD2), 2-thiobarbituric (TBA) reactive substances (TBARS), tumor necrosis factor α (TNF-α), thioredoxin reductase (TrxR), unconjugated BPA (uBPA).
Summary of positive, equivocal, and negative statistical associations between BPA and oxidative stress biomarkers in human studies.
| POSITIVE | NO ASSOCIATION | NEGATIVE 1 |
|---|---|---|
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| Li 2018 (urine) 3 | Huang 2017 and 2018, and Chang 2019 (urine) | - |
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| Ferguson 2016 (urine) | - | - |
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| Yang 2014 (urine) | Hong 2009 (urine) | |
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| Dallio 2018 (serum TBARS) | Kondolot 2016 (plasma TBARS) | - |
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| Wang 2019 (urine) | Huang 2017 and 2018, and Chang 2019 (urine) | - |
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| - | Huang 2017 and 2018, and Chang 2019 (urine) | - |
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| Dallio 2018 (serum SOD and CAT) | Kondolot 2016 (erythrocytes) | Huang 2017 (maternal plasma and cord blood (GPx) |
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| - | Kondolot 2016 (erythrocytes) | - |
| - | Erden 2014 (serum) | - |
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| Kim 2016 (association BPA vs. liver function for certain oxidative stress genes) | - | - |
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| Veiga-Lopez 2015 (plasma) | - | - |
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| - | Veiga-Lopez 2015 (plasma) | - |
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| Zhou 2019 (urine) | - | - |
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| - | Choi 2019 (serum) | Choi 2019 (urine) |
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| - | Kondolot 2016 (plasma) | - |
| - | - | - |
1 For antioxidants (consumed during oxidative stress), but not antioxidant enzymes, a negative statistical association with BPA is regarded as positive in terms of effects on health due to oxidative stress. 2 Abbreviations: bisphenol A (4,4′-isopropylidenediphenol) (BPA), catalase (CAT), 3-chloro-tyrosine (3-ClTyr), o,o’-di-tyrosine (diTyr), deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), glutathione peroxidase (GPx), glutathione (GSH), 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal-mercapturic acid (HNE-MA), 8-iso-prostaglandin F2α (8-isoprostane), malondialdehyde (MDA), 8-nitro-guanine (8-NO2Gua), 3-nitro-tyrosine (3-NO2Tyr), 8-oxo-7,8-dihydro-2′-deoxyguanosine (8-OHdG), 8-oxo-7,8-dihydroguanosine (8-OHG), positive (POS), superoxide dismutase (SOD), 2-thiobarbituric (TBA) reactive substances (TBARS). 3 Source of the oxidative stress biomarker (often the same as for BPA, see Table 1).
Evaluation of analytical methods and strengths and weaknesses of the identified biomarkers of oxidative stress in human studies on BPA.
| Biomarker (Source) | Number of Human Studies 1 | Associations between BPA and Oxidative Stress Biomarkers | Suitable Analytical Methods | Strengths | Weaknesses |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 8-OHdG 2 (urine) | 15 | Dominantly positive associations, but also equivocal results. No negative associations | Best options: LC-MS or HPLC-EC. Other options: ELISA, GC-MS | Easy to measure | Not BPA- or organ-specific. May originate from food or endogenous sources. Can display considerable inter- and intra-day variations |
| 8-isoprostane (urine) | 5 | Only positive associations | Best options: LC-MS or GC-MS | 8-isoprostane is specific for lipid peroxidation | Not BPA- or organ-specific |
| MDA (chromatographic separation) (urine) | 5 | Dominantly positive associations, but also equivocal results. No negative associations | Best option: derivatization followed by GC-MS or HPLC separation prior to UV or fluorescence analysis | MDA is specific for lipid peroxidation | Risk of artefactual generation during preparatory steps involving excessive heating prior to analysis. Not BPA- or organ-specific |
| MDA (unspecific detection) and other aldehydes using TBARS (serum, plasma) | 4 | Two positive, two with no associations | Not recommended: UV or fluorescence analysis of formed chromophore, but no separatory step used in the analysis | May be related to oxidative stress | Unclear what is measured. Risk of artefactual generation during preparatory steps. Not BPA- or organ-specific |
| Antioxidant enzymes (erythrocytes, plasma, serum) | 3 | Heterogeneous outcomes | Best option: enzymatic activity assay. Others: Western blot or ELISA | Antioxidant enzymes may be upregulated during conditions of oxidative stress | Not BPA- or organ-specific. High oxidative stress levels may be required to induce additional synthesis of antioxidant enzymes |
| HNE-MA (urine) | 2 | One positive, one with no association | Best options: LC-MS, ELISA | HNE-MA is specific for lipid peroxidation | Not BPA- or organ-specific |
| Total thiols and GSH (erythrocytes, serum) | 2 | No associations | Best option: LC-MS. Others: kinetic assay or by spectrophotometry | Lowered SH groups may be related to increased oxidative stress | Not BPA- or organ-specific. GSH is used in a broad range of biochemical reactions making it less specific |
| Polymorphisms in oxidative stress genes (DNA) | 2 (1 for liver function, 1 for MDA using separation) | Both studies found positive associations | Best option: DNA gene sequencing using PCR | Poly-morphisms in oxidative stress genes may be related to susceptibility to toxic substances and diseases | Not BPA- or organ-specific. Protein levels may not always reflect the number of gene copies. Proteins can have several functions |
| 3-NO2Tyr/3-ClTyr/diTyr (plasma) | 1 | Positive association for 3-NO2Tyr. No association for 3-ClTyr or diTyr | Best option: LC-MS | 3-NO2Tyr, 3-ClTyr and diTyr are specific for RNS, HOCl and ROS, respectively | Not BPA- or organ-specific |
| 8-OHG | 1 | Positive association | Best options: LC-MS or HPLC-EC. Others: ELISA, GC-MS | Easy to measure | Not BPA- or organ-specific. May originate from food or endogenous sources. Can display considerable inter- and intra-day variations |
| 8-NO2Gua (urine) | 1 | No association | Best option: LC-MS | 8-NO2Gua is specific for RNS | Not BPA- or organ-specific |
| Protein carbonyls (plasma) | 1 | No association | Best option: ELISA | Protein carbonyls are specific for oxidative stress and are considered stable being only slowly repaired/turned over | Not BPA- or organ-specific. Origin somewhat unclear |
| Bilirubin (serum and urine) | 1 | Inverse association (urine) and no association (serum) | Best option: LC-MS | Easy to measure | Not BPA- or organ-specific |
| Total antioxidant activity (seminal plasma) | 1 | No association | Best option: commercial H2O2-based kit | Easy to measure | Not BPA- or organ-specific. Unclear what is measured |
1 The three Taiwanese studies on the same pregnancy cohort [25,26,27] had recruited subjects during a similar time period and observed largely the same outcomes regarding 8-isoprostane, 8-OHdG, 8-NO2Gua, and HNE-MA, and are therefore counted as one study; 2 Abbreviations: bisphenol A (4,4′-isopropylidenediphenol) (BPA), (3-chloro-tyrosine (3-ClTyr), o,o’-di-tyrosine (diTyr), deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS), glutathione (GSH), 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal-mercapturic acid (HNE-MA), hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), hypochlorous acid (HOCl), high-performance liquid chromatography with electrochemical detection (HPLC-EC), 8-iso-prostaglandin F2α (8-isoprostane), liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS), malondialdehyde (MDA), 8-nitro-guanine (8-NO2Gua), 3-nitro-tyrosine (3-NO2Tyr), 8-oxo-7,8-dihydro-2′-deoxyguanosine (8-OHdG), 8-oxo-7,8-dihydroguanosine (8-OHG), polymerase chain reaction (PCR), reactive nitrogen species (RNS), reactive oxygen species (ROS), sulfhydryl (SH), 2-thiobarbituric (TBA) reactive substances (TBARS), ultraviolet (UV).