Smaller genitals at school age in boys whose mothers were exposed to non-persistent pesticides in early pregnancy

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Smaller genitals at school age in boys whose mothers were exposed to non-persistent pesticides in early pregnancy. / Veje, Christine Wohlfahrt; Andersen, H R; Jensen, Tina Kold; Grandjean, Philippe; Skakkebaek, N E; Main, K M.

In: International Journal of Andrology, Vol. 35, No. 3, 2012, p. 265-72.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Veje, CW, Andersen, HR, Jensen, TK, Grandjean, P, Skakkebaek, NE & Main, KM 2012, 'Smaller genitals at school age in boys whose mothers were exposed to non-persistent pesticides in early pregnancy', International Journal of Andrology, vol. 35, no. 3, pp. 265-72. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2605.2012.01252.x

APA

Veje, C. W., Andersen, H. R., Jensen, T. K., Grandjean, P., Skakkebaek, N. E., & Main, K. M. (2012). Smaller genitals at school age in boys whose mothers were exposed to non-persistent pesticides in early pregnancy. International Journal of Andrology, 35(3), 265-72. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2605.2012.01252.x

Vancouver

Veje CW, Andersen HR, Jensen TK, Grandjean P, Skakkebaek NE, Main KM. Smaller genitals at school age in boys whose mothers were exposed to non-persistent pesticides in early pregnancy. International Journal of Andrology. 2012;35(3):265-72. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2605.2012.01252.x

Author

Veje, Christine Wohlfahrt ; Andersen, H R ; Jensen, Tina Kold ; Grandjean, Philippe ; Skakkebaek, N E ; Main, K M. / Smaller genitals at school age in boys whose mothers were exposed to non-persistent pesticides in early pregnancy. In: International Journal of Andrology. 2012 ; Vol. 35, No. 3. pp. 265-72.

Bibtex

@article{a66f77d9abcc49d5ac054cb4138832ff,
title = "Smaller genitals at school age in boys whose mothers were exposed to non-persistent pesticides in early pregnancy",
abstract = "Endocrine disrupting chemicals are believed to play a role in the development of the testicular dysgenesis syndrome. Many pesticides are known to have endocrine disrupting abilities. In a previous study, sons of women who were occupationally exposed to non-persistent pesticides in early pregnancy showed signs of impaired reproductive function (reduced genital size and altered serum hormone concentrations) at three months of age. To assess the possible long-term effects of prenatal pesticide exposure, the boys were re-examined at 6-11 years. The 94 boys (59 exposed, 35 unexposed) underwent genital examinations including ultrasound of testicular volumes, puberty staging (Tanner), anthropometry, and blood sampling. Only a few of the boys had reached puberty (n = 3). Among prepubescent boys, testicular volume and penile length (age- and weight-adjusted) were reduced if mothers were exposed to pesticides. The effects were associated with the maternal exposure levels, so that high-exposed boys had smaller genitals than medium-exposed boys, who had smaller genitals than those who were unexposed. Boys of mothers in the high exposure group (n = 23) had 24.7% smaller testes (95% CI: -62.2; -10.1) and 9.4% shorter penile length (95% CI: -16.8; -1.1) compared with the unexposed. The testicular volume and penile length at school age could be tracked to measures from the same boys made at 3 months, e.g. those that had small testes at school age also had small testes at 3 months. Pituitary and testicular hormone serum concentrations did not differ between exposed and unexposed boys. Eight prenatally exposed boys had genital malformations (no unexposed). These boys had smaller testis, shorter penile length and lower inhibin B concentrations than prepubertal boys without genital malformations. The findings support the results obtained at three months of age and indicate that prenatal pesticide exposure has long-term effects on reproductive function in boys.",
author = "Veje, {Christine Wohlfahrt} and Andersen, {H R} and Jensen, {Tina Kold} and Philippe Grandjean and Skakkebaek, {N E} and Main, {K M}",
note = "{\textcopyright} 2012 The Authors. International Journal of Andrology {\textcopyright} 2012 European Academy of Andrology.",
year = "2012",
doi = "10.1111/j.1365-2605.2012.01252.x",
language = "English",
volume = "35",
pages = "265--72",
journal = "International Journal of Andrology",
issn = "0105-6263",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Smaller genitals at school age in boys whose mothers were exposed to non-persistent pesticides in early pregnancy

AU - Veje, Christine Wohlfahrt

AU - Andersen, H R

AU - Jensen, Tina Kold

AU - Grandjean, Philippe

AU - Skakkebaek, N E

AU - Main, K M

N1 - © 2012 The Authors. International Journal of Andrology © 2012 European Academy of Andrology.

PY - 2012

Y1 - 2012

N2 - Endocrine disrupting chemicals are believed to play a role in the development of the testicular dysgenesis syndrome. Many pesticides are known to have endocrine disrupting abilities. In a previous study, sons of women who were occupationally exposed to non-persistent pesticides in early pregnancy showed signs of impaired reproductive function (reduced genital size and altered serum hormone concentrations) at three months of age. To assess the possible long-term effects of prenatal pesticide exposure, the boys were re-examined at 6-11 years. The 94 boys (59 exposed, 35 unexposed) underwent genital examinations including ultrasound of testicular volumes, puberty staging (Tanner), anthropometry, and blood sampling. Only a few of the boys had reached puberty (n = 3). Among prepubescent boys, testicular volume and penile length (age- and weight-adjusted) were reduced if mothers were exposed to pesticides. The effects were associated with the maternal exposure levels, so that high-exposed boys had smaller genitals than medium-exposed boys, who had smaller genitals than those who were unexposed. Boys of mothers in the high exposure group (n = 23) had 24.7% smaller testes (95% CI: -62.2; -10.1) and 9.4% shorter penile length (95% CI: -16.8; -1.1) compared with the unexposed. The testicular volume and penile length at school age could be tracked to measures from the same boys made at 3 months, e.g. those that had small testes at school age also had small testes at 3 months. Pituitary and testicular hormone serum concentrations did not differ between exposed and unexposed boys. Eight prenatally exposed boys had genital malformations (no unexposed). These boys had smaller testis, shorter penile length and lower inhibin B concentrations than prepubertal boys without genital malformations. The findings support the results obtained at three months of age and indicate that prenatal pesticide exposure has long-term effects on reproductive function in boys.

AB - Endocrine disrupting chemicals are believed to play a role in the development of the testicular dysgenesis syndrome. Many pesticides are known to have endocrine disrupting abilities. In a previous study, sons of women who were occupationally exposed to non-persistent pesticides in early pregnancy showed signs of impaired reproductive function (reduced genital size and altered serum hormone concentrations) at three months of age. To assess the possible long-term effects of prenatal pesticide exposure, the boys were re-examined at 6-11 years. The 94 boys (59 exposed, 35 unexposed) underwent genital examinations including ultrasound of testicular volumes, puberty staging (Tanner), anthropometry, and blood sampling. Only a few of the boys had reached puberty (n = 3). Among prepubescent boys, testicular volume and penile length (age- and weight-adjusted) were reduced if mothers were exposed to pesticides. The effects were associated with the maternal exposure levels, so that high-exposed boys had smaller genitals than medium-exposed boys, who had smaller genitals than those who were unexposed. Boys of mothers in the high exposure group (n = 23) had 24.7% smaller testes (95% CI: -62.2; -10.1) and 9.4% shorter penile length (95% CI: -16.8; -1.1) compared with the unexposed. The testicular volume and penile length at school age could be tracked to measures from the same boys made at 3 months, e.g. those that had small testes at school age also had small testes at 3 months. Pituitary and testicular hormone serum concentrations did not differ between exposed and unexposed boys. Eight prenatally exposed boys had genital malformations (no unexposed). These boys had smaller testis, shorter penile length and lower inhibin B concentrations than prepubertal boys without genital malformations. The findings support the results obtained at three months of age and indicate that prenatal pesticide exposure has long-term effects on reproductive function in boys.

U2 - 10.1111/j.1365-2605.2012.01252.x

DO - 10.1111/j.1365-2605.2012.01252.x

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 22394112

VL - 35

SP - 265

EP - 272

JO - International Journal of Andrology

JF - International Journal of Andrology

SN - 0105-6263

IS - 3

ER -

ID: 40178606