| Literature DB >> 32595601 |
Chiara Castellini1, Maria Totaro1, Antonio Parisi1, Settimio D'Andrea1, Liana Lucente1, Giuliana Cordeschi1, Sandro Francavilla1, Felice Francavilla1, Arcangelo Barbonetti1.
Abstract
Bisphenol A (BPA) represents the main chemical monomer of epoxy resins and polycarbonate plastics. The environmental presence of BPA is widespread, and it can easily be absorbed by the human body through dietary and transdermal routes, so that more than 90% of the population in western countries display detectable BPA levels in the urine. As BPA is qualified as an endocrine disruptor, growing concern is rising for possible harmful effects on human health. This review critically discusses the available literature dealing with the possible impact of BPA on male fertility. In rodent models, the in vivo exposure to BPA negatively interfered with the regulation of spermatogenesis throughout the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis. Furthermore, in in vitro studies, BPA promoted mitochondrial dysfunction and oxidative/apoptotic damages in spermatozoa from different species, including humans. To date, the claimed clinical adverse effects on male fertility are largely based on the results from studies assessing the relationship between urinary BPA concentration and conventional semen parameters. These studies, however, produced controversial evidence due to heterogeneity in the extent of BPA exposure, type of population, and enrollment setting. Moreover, the cause-effect relationship cannot be established due to the cross-sectional design of the studies as well as the large spontaneous between- and within-subject variability of semen parameters. The best evidence of an adverse effect of BPA on male fertility would be provided by prospective studies on clinically relevant endpoints, including natural or medically assisted pregnancies among men either with different exposure degrees (occupational/environmental) or with different clinical conditions (fertile/subfertile).Entities:
Keywords: endocrine disruptors; environmental pollution; oxidative stress; sperm DNA damage; spermatozoa
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32595601 PMCID: PMC7304337 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2020.00353
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Epidemiological studies on the relationship of urinary BPA concentration with semen quality and/or other reproductive outcomes.
| Mendiola et al. ( | Fertile men ( | 1.5 (0.80–3.0) μg/l | No significant associations between urinary BPA and semen parameters. | Age, BMI, smoking status, ethnicity, center, urinary creatinine concentration, and time to motility analysis. |
| Meeker et al. ( | Male partners of subfertile couples ( | 1.3 (1.8–2.5) ng/ml | Urinary BPA concentrations were linearly associated with lower percentages of sperm with normal morphology (β regression coefficient: −0.90, 95% CI: −1.79, −0.004, | Age, BMI, abstinence period, and smoking. |
| Li et al. ( | Factory workers with and without occupational BPA exposure ( | 38.7 (6.3–354.3) μg/grCr in exposed and | Urinary BPA was associated with lower sperm concentration (β regression coefficient: −15.6; | Age, education, history of chronic disease, previous exposure to other chemicals and heavy metals, employment history, marital status, age at first intercourse, smoking, alcohol consumption, and center. |
| Chen et al. ( | Infertile men ( | Geometric means: | No significant associations between urinary BPA levels and standard semen parameters | Age, BMI, and urinary creatinine concentration. |
| Buck Luis et al. ( | Couples recruited upon discontinuing contraception to become pregnant ( | 1.04 (0.91–1.18) ng/ml | BPA concentration was not associated with time to pregnancy. | Partner age, BMI and urinary creatinine concentration, female urinary BPA concentration, smoking, and center. |
| Knez et al. ( | Male partners of couples | 1.55 (0.81–3.27) ng/ml | Urinary BPA was associated with lower total sperm count (β regression coefficient: −0.241, 95% CI: −0.47, −0.012), sperm concentration (β regression coefficient: −0.219, 95% CI: −0.436, −0.003), and viability (β regression coefficient: −2.66, 95% CI: −4.991, −0.392). No association between urinary BPA concentration and embryo development parameters at IVF/ICSI. | Male age, BMI, current smoking status, alcohol consumption, abstinence period, and urinary creatinine concentration. |
| Lassen et al. ( | General population ( | 3.25 (0.59–14.89) ng/ml | BPA urine concentration was significantly associated with lower progressive motility (−6.7%; 95% CI: −11.76, −1.63). | Smoking, varicocele, cryptorchidism, genital conditions, and time to motility analysis. |
| Miao et al. | Factory workers with and without occupational BPA exposure ( | 36.23 ± 7.69 μg/grCr in exposed and | Exposed men ( | Age, education, history of disease, smoking, and alcohol consumption |
| Dodge et al. ( | Couples seeking infertility treatments ( | 1.6 (0.8–2.8) ng/ml | Lower male BPA concentrations were associated with a greater proportion of high-quality embryos in IVF cycles (RR = 1.92; 95% CI: 1.13, 3.25). | Maternal age, paternal normal weight, maternal normal weight, and maternal smoking. |
| Goldstone et al. ( | Male partners of couples who discontinued contraception to become pregnant ( | 0.51 (0.46–0.58) μg/grCr | No significant association was found between urinary BPA levels and any standard semen parameter. | Age, abstinence time, alcohol consumption, BMI, smoking, previously fathered pregnancy, center, and ethnicity. |
| Vitku et al. ( | Male partners in couples seeking infertility treatment ( | 0.075 (0.055–0.100) ng/ml | Seminal BPA but not plasma BPA was negatively associated with sperm count (r | Age, BMI, and abstinence time. |
| Adoamnei et al. ( | Healthy young university students ( | 1.8 (0.14–11.9) μg/grCr | Urinary BPA concentration was negatively associated with sperm concentration (β regression coefficient = −0.04, 95% CI: −0.07; −0.02) and total sperm count (β regression coefficient = −0.05, 95% CI: −0.08; −0.02). | BMI, smoking, varicocele, abstinence time, and time to motility analysis. |
| Radwan et al. ( | Male partners of couples | 1.64 ± 2.32 μg/grCr | Higher urinary BPA concentration was related to lower sperm motility ( | Abstinence time, age, smoking, alcohol consumption, and past diseases. |
| Pollard et al. ( | Male partners in couples seeking to become pregnant without history of infertility ( | 2.5 ng/ml | Higher urinary BPA concentrations were associated with increased percentage of sperm with abnormal tail morphology ( | Age, ethnicity, income, smoking, and BMI. |
BMI, body mass index; BPA, bisphenol A; CI, confidence intervals; ICSI, intracytoplasmic sperm injection; IVF, in vitro fertilization; RR, rate ratio; VCL, curvilinear velocity.
values are mean (25th−75th percentiles);
seminal BPA levels;
r = correlation coefficient of partial correlation; geometric mean.