Litcius/Paper detail

The Association between Sex Hormones, Pubertal Milestones and Benzophenone-3 Exposure, Measured by Urinary Biomarker or Questionnaire

Courtney M. Giannini, Bin Huang, Donald Walt Chandler, Cecily S. Fassler, Richard C. Schwartz, Frank M. Biro, Susan M. Pinney

2021International Journal of Environmental Health Research15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Experimental studies have suggested benzophenone-3 (BP-3), a sunscreen ingredient, may have endocrine-disrupting properties. A cohort of girls were recruited at ages 6-7 years and returned semi-annually for pubertal maturation staging, provided blood for serum hormone analyses [estradiol, estrone, testosterone, dehydroepiandrosterone-sulfate (DHEA-S)], and urine to measure BP-3 concentrations. We found a significant negative linear association between amount of reported sunscreen use and testosterone levels at the onset of puberty (N = 157, adjusted β = -0.0163, 97.5% CI:-0.0300,-0.0026). The 2nd quartile of the BP-3 biomarker had earlier thelarche compared to the 1st quartile (N = 282, adjusted HR = 1.584, 97.5% CI:1.038,2.415). Results suggest that higher report of sunscreen use may be associated with lower testosterone levels at thelarche and a non-linear relationship between the BP-3 urinary biomarker and onset of puberty, although the clinical significance of the finding is limited and may be a random effect. Improved methods of BP-3 exposure characterization are needed.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineQuartileBiomarkerEstroneTestosterone (patch)Dehydroepiandrosterone sulfateInternal medicineHormoneUrinary systemUrinePhysiologyCohortEndocrinologyEndocrine systemAndrogenBiologyConfidence intervalBiochemistryEffects and risks of endocrine disrupting chemicalsSkin Protection and AgingHormonal and reproductive studies
The Association between Sex Hormones, Pubertal Milestones and Benzophenone-3 Exposure, Measured by Urinary Biomarker or Questionnaire | Litcius