by Associated Press
NEW YORK -- A manmade ingredient of many plastics, cosmetics
and other consumer products may be interfering with prenatal male
sexual development, new research suggests.
A study of 85 infant boys found a correlation between increased
exposure to some forms of the chemical phthalate and smaller penis
size and incomplete testicular descent.
It is the first time phthalate has been shown to influence the
sexual development of human males.
"This is clearly something that needs to be examined in
a larger sample," said Shanna Swan, a professor at the University
of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry who headed the study.
A paper describing the research will appear in a future issue
of Environmental Health Perspectives, a journal of the National
Institute for Environmental Health Sciences. Swan discussed the
findings in an interview Thursday.
Previous experiments in rats indicate that the chemical interferes
with testosterone during gestation, producing a condition known
as "phthalate syndrome." Rats with the syndrome suffer
from genital birth defects, infertility and testicular cancer.
The human study raises concerns because the infants did not experience
levels even close to the high doses used in rat experiments. The
boys' exposures, measured by analyzing their mothers' urine during
pregnancy, were no higher than those found among the general population.
The last few decades have seen a rise in the types of birth defects
that would be expected from prenatal testosterone interference,
including hypospadia, a defect in which the urethra does not extend
to the tip of the penis, and undescended testicles. Testicular
cancer has increased as well, although it is a different type
than rats experience in phthalate syndrome.
"The results are both groundbreaking and potentially troubling,"
said Russ Hauser, a professor at the Harvard School of Public
Health who was not involved in the research. "A majority
of the U.S. population is exposed to phthalates at the level measured
in Shanna's study."
The study does not necessarily indicate that the boys were harmed
by their exposure to phthalate, however, and none of them exhibited
overt birth defects. The researchers found a correlation between
exposure to some forms of phthalate and a measurement called the
anogenital index _ the distance between the genitals and the anus.
Though that measurement has no physiological significance by
itself, it is connected to penis size at birth and is "a
very good indicator of internal malformations," said Paul
Foster, a senior fellow at the National Institute of Environmental
Health Sciences. Newborn rats and other lab animals with phthalate
syndrome have unusually short anogenital distances.
A growing body of research suggests that some chemicals used
in consumer products may cause public health problems by interfering
with sex hormones. A study in the current issue of the journal
Endocrinology exposed newborn mice to bisphenol-A, a chemical
found in plastics and dental sealants, at doses comparable to
those found in the human environment. At puberty the mice were
more likely to develop cancer-related mammary duct abnormalities.
"In humans this would cause breast cancer," said Tufts
University cell biologist Anna Soto, the study's lead author.