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Early-life exposure to bisphenol A and reproductive-related outcomes in rodent models: a systematic review and meta-analysis

Xiaohan Ren, Tongtong Zhang, Xinglin Chen, Xiyi Wei, Ye Tian, Guangyao Li, Xu Zhang, Wei Zhang, Zebing You, Shangqian Wang, Chao Qin

2020Aging19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

We performed this meta-analysis to elucidate the associations between early-life BPA exposure and reproductive-related outcome indicators. The standardized mean differences (SMDs) and its 95% confidence intervals (CIs) were measured by fixed-effects or random-effects models. The results revealed that BPA exposure at extremely-high dose (>50mg/kg/day) was significantly associated with negative reproductive-related outcomes (Prostate weight: SMD: -4.21; 95% Cl: -5.97, -2.44; Testis weight: SMD: -1.92; 95% Cl: -2.61, -1.23; Epididymis weight: SMD: -2.16; 95% Cl: -3.47, -0.86; Daily sperm production; SMD: -1.90; 95% Cl: -3.27, -0.53; Epididymal sperm count; SMD: -3.42; 95% Cl: -3.87, -2.97). Meanwhile, regardless of the dose, early-life BPA exposure could result in an adverse effect on sperm parameters of F1 generation male rodents at any period. Also, we found the non-monotonic dose response curves of BPA in specific tissues or organs, which may challenge the traditional mindset of "safe dose". This study demonstrated that bisphenol A exposure was relevant to adverse reproductive-related outcomes at specially appointed dose and period of life. Yet the assumption that no adverse effects can occur below the "safe" dose is suspected.

Topics & Concepts

Meta-analysisSpermReproductive toxicityAdverse effectMedicineConfidence intervalEpididymisNo-observed-adverse-effect levelPhysiologyInternal medicineAndrologyToxicityEffects and risks of endocrine disrupting chemicalsAnimal testing and alternativesMicroplastics and Plastic Pollution