Associations Between Endocrine-Disrupting Chemical Exposure and Fertility Outcomes: A Decade of Human Epidemiological Evidence
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Search Strategy
2.2. Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria
2.3. PRISMA Process
2.4. Risk of Bias Assessment
2.5. Data Extraction
3. Results
3.1. Male Reproductive Outcomes
3.2. Female Reproductive Outcomes
3.3. IVF and Early Reproductive Outcomes
3.4. Hormonal and Biomarker Disruptions
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
Abbreviation | Definition |
AMH | Anti-Müllerian Hormone |
ART | Assisted Reproductive Technology |
BPA | Bisphenol A |
BPAF | Bisphenol AF |
BPP | Bisphenol P |
BPS | Bisphenol S |
BPZ | Bisphenol Z |
BMI | Body Mass Index |
BP | Blood Pressure |
DDT | Dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane |
DEHP | Di(2-ethylhexyl) Phthalate |
DOR | Decreased Ovarian Reserve |
E2 | Estradiol |
EDCs | Endocrine-Disrupting Chemicals |
ERRγ | Estrogen-Related Receptor Gamma |
ERα | Estrogen Receptor Alpha |
ERβ | Estrogen Receptor Beta |
FF | Follicular Fluid |
FSH | Follicle-Stimulating Hormone |
GPER | G Protein-Coupled Estrogen Receptor |
IVF | In Vitro Fertilization |
LH | Luteinizing Hormone |
MEHP | Mono(2-ethylhexyl) Phthalate |
MEHHP | Mono(2-ethyl-5-hydroxyhexyl) Phthalate |
MEOHP | Mono(2-ethyl-5-oxohexyl) Phthalate |
PCA | Principal Component Analysis |
PCBs | Polychlorinated Biphenyls |
PCOS | Polycystic Ovary Syndrome |
PFAA | Perfluoroalkyl Acids |
PFAS | Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances |
PFCs | Perfluorinated Compounds |
POI | Primary Ovarian Insufficiency |
POPs | Persistent Organic Pollutants |
PR | Pulse Rate |
PROSPERO | International Prospective Register of Systematic Reviews |
RR | Respiratory Rate |
SA | Semen Analysis |
SART | Society for Assisted Reproductive Technology |
SEARCH | Study of Exposure and Reproductive Health |
SHARE | Systematic Harmonization and Research Environment |
TCC | Triclocarban |
TCS | Triclosan |
UPDB | Utah Population Database |
WHO | World Health Organization |
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Authors | Year | Country | Type of Study | Participants/Focus Group | Measurement and Data Collection | Comparison Group | Measured Outcome | Key Findings | Specific Fertility Findings | Follow-Up/Study Limitations |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ramsay et al. [13] | 2023 | U.S.A. | Retrospective cohort study | 21,563 men dealing with fertility problems (23,922 samples) | SHARE cohort (all semen analysis results 1996–2017 in Utah), Utah Population Database (UPDB) | Reproductive-age men without fertility problems | Relationship between environmental exposure to airborne EDCs from industrial sources and semen analysis (SA) parameters | EDCs are negatively associated with sperm’s motility, concentration, and ejaculate volume | Increased exposure is associated with higher risk of azoospermia and/or decreased sperm motility | 12 years follow-up, limited generalizability due to the sample of infertile men, no information about the occupation, no adjustment for any comorbid medical conditions, lack of diversity |
Zhan et al. [9] | 2023 | China | Case–control study (multi-center, hospital-based) | 733 women (321 women with PCOS) | Questionnaires, blood, urine, semen samples | 412 women without reproductive or endocrine disorders but with fertility problems due to male infertility | The association of bisphenol A and its analogs with PCOS | Concentrations of bisphenol analogs were significantly higher in the cases group | Increased levels of BPA, BPS, BPP, BPZ and BPAF are associated with high risk of PCOS | 2 years follow-up, exposure to BPA was measured after the diagnosis of PCOS, bisphenol analogs have rapid elimination from the body and short half-lives, no information on dietary habits (healthy diet can reduce the odds of PCOS) |
Wei et al. [14] | 2024 | China | Case–control study | 302 women (181 with fertility problems) | Blood samples, clinical diagnosis | 121 women without fertility problems | Relationship between EDCs (parabens, paraben metabolites, TCS, TCC, bisphenols, benzophenones, phthalate metabolites) and female infertility | Higher levels of EDCs in serum samples of infertile women | EDCs are significantly associated with female infertility | Lack of rigorous inclusion criteria, single sample measurement, need for animal experiments to reinforce the findings |
Zeng et al. [15] | 2023 | China | Prospective cohort study | 729 women in IVF treatment | Self-administered study questionnaires, medical record, follicular fluid (FF) samples, Society for Assisted Reproductive Technology (SART) guidelines | Reproductive-age women without fertility problems | Association between PFAA in follicular fluid (FF) and the quality of embryo in women undergoing IVF | Increased levels of PFAA in FF are associated with poorer embryo quality during IVF | Exposure to PFAA is associated with adverse outcomes of IVF | 5 months follow-up, does not include seminal PFAA concentrations from the male partner, limited generalizability due to IVF patients |
Nobles et al. [16] | 2023 | U.S.A. | Prospective cohort study | 1228 women trying to conceive | Blood and urine samples | Reproductive-age women who were not trying to get pregnant | Association of the reproductive effects of phthalates and the ability of women to get pregnant and maintain the pregnancy and also biomarkers of hormone disruption, inflammation, and oxidative stress | Increased levels are associated with decreased fertility, inflammation, oxidative stress and hormonal changes (↓Ε2, ↑LH, ↑FSH at ovulation) | Increased levels are associated with decreased fertility, inflammation, oxidative stress and hormonal changes (↓Ε2, ↑LH, ↑FSH at ovulation) | Up to six menstrual cycles and throughout pregnancy if they became pregnant follow-up, risk of bias related to misclassification of exposure, limited generalizability |
Zhang et al. [17] | 2021 | U.S.A. | Prospective cohort study | 386 women in IVF treatment | General and lifestyle questionnaires, anthropometric measurements, urine and blood sample | Reproductive-age women without fertility problems | Association of prenatal urinary phenol concentrations and the risk of preterm birth | High 1st trimester BPS levels and high prenatal BPA levels were associated with increased risk of preterm birth, high 1st trimester benzophenone-3 levels and high 1st and 3rd trimester triclosan levels were inversely associated with risk of preterm birth | Concentrations of BPA in late pregnancy and parabens in early pregnancy are associated with preterm birth | Potential bias due to lack of trimester data, Potential misclassification of chemical exposure due to short half-life, Limited generalizability of findings due to specific sample |
Abdo et al. [18] | 2023 | Jordan | Case–control study | 325 women (213 cases with fertility problems) | Interviews, patient medical files, urine samples | Reproductive-age women without fertility problems (95 controls and 16 others) | Levels of phthalates (DEHP) and their metabolites (MEHP: MEHHP, MEOHP) and their role in fertility outcomes | The levels of MEOHP and total DEHP were higher in cases than controls | Positive association of DEHP with sterility/ infertility | Higher number of cases than controls, lack of adjustment for urinary dilution, rapid metabolism and excretion of phthalate compounds |
Pan et al. [19] | 2019 | China | Case–control study | 374 women (157 with primary ovarian insufficiency) | Questionnaires, interviews, blood samples | 217 healthy women of reproductive age (controls) | Levels of selected persistent organic pollutants (POPs) in the blood and their association with the risk of primary ovarian insufficiency (POI) | Levels of p,p’-DDT were 2.5 to 3 times higher in cases than in controls, sum of p,p′-DDT, its metabolites and PCB were higher in cases than in controls | Increased levels of PCB and p,p′-DDT were associated with high risk of POI | Not reflecting all POP exposure, moderate sample size, risk of bias (for control group) |
Pollack et al. [20] | 2018 | U.S.A. | Cross-sectional study | 143 healthy women (509 urine samples) | Questionnaires, anthropometric measurements, urine samples | Association of bisphenol A (BPA), chlorophenols, benzophenones, parabens, and their metabolites with reproductive hormones | Parabens, their metabolites, and BPA were associated with increased estradiol, all factors were associated with increased progesterone, and phenol factor was associated with decreased FSH and LH | Phenols and parabens may influence ovarian hormone levels | Follow-up for up to two menstrual cycles of study, risk of bias related to measurement error, some limitations of PCA method | |
Gao et al. [21] | 2024 | China | Cross-sectional study | 155 men in IVF therapy | Study of Exposure and Reproductive Health, questionnaires, urine and semen samples | Reproductive-age men without fertility problems | Relationship between EDCs with high levels and semen quality parameters (concentration and motility) | EDCs act negatively on semen quality (motility) and to a minor percentage on sperm quantity (concentration) | EDCs are associated with lower quality of semen parameters and with infertility | Cross-sectional study design, small sample size, potential presence of additional unmeasured confounding factors, examined only 5 main sperm parameters |
Rahimi et al. [22] | 2020 | Iran | Comparative study | 645 women (308 greenhouse workers) | Research-made questionnaire, clinical assessment (BMI, BP, PR, RR), blood samples | 337 women (housewives) | The effects of working in greenhouse (exposure to pesticides) on reproductive health | Greenhouse workers: high rate of spontaneous abortion, infertility, low birth weight, and preterm birth | Exposure to pesticides can affect fertility and birth outcomes | Lack of evaluation of different types of pesticides used in greenhouse, cross-sectional research method that does not reflect the causal relationship, inability to quantify the amount of pesticides used and to assess the use of protective equipment |
Li et al. [23] | 2024 | China | Prospective cohort study | 188 women undergoing assisted reproduction treatment (ART) | Study of Exposure and Reproductive Health (SEARCH), questionnaires, digital health records, and follicular fluid samples | Reproductive-age women without fertility problems | Levels of EDCs in follicular fluid (FF) and their role in oocyte growth and maturation and early reproductive outcomes | EDCs are associated with all four adverse early reproductive outcomes (high quality embryos, mature oocytes, normal fertilized oocytes, and retrieved oocytes) | EDCs can negatively affect reproductive health | Limited generalizability, does not include male factor, and small sample |
Palak et al. [24] | 2021 | Poland | Case–control study | 116 men (66 cases with abnormal sperm parameters) | Semen samples, standardized ejaculate examination based on the WHO criteria | 50 men with normal sperm (controls) | Association of bisphenol A (BPA) with steroid hormone levels and its role in sperm quality parameters | BPA is related to adverse levels of seminal plasma, total sperm concentration, and normal sperm morphology | BPA negatively affects the male reproductive functions, spermatogenesis, and fertility | Small sample size (may reduce statistical power of the study), limited generalizability |
Zhang et al. [10] | 2024 | China | Prospective case–control study | 152 female volunteers (78 cases with decreased ovarian reserve (DOR)) | Questionnaires, medical records, biological samples | 74 women with non-decreasing ovarian reserve- non-DOR | Relationship between bisphenol S (BPS) and female DOR | Serum BPS levels are related to adverse levels of AMH and E2 and positively related to FSH levels; serum BPA levels are higher in the DOR group than the non-DOR group | BPS and BPA are significant factors for reduced ovarian function and infertility | Small number of cases (limiting conclusions regarding the relationship between BPS exposure and ovarian function), absence of long-term follow-up data of the volunteers (restricts the associations between BPS exposure and reproductive outcomes), lack of information about the crosstalk mechanism of AMH, FSH, LH, and E2 caused by BPS exposure |
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Tzouma, Z.; Dourou, P.; Diamanti, A.; Harizopoulou, V.; Papalexis, P.; Karampas, G.; Liepinaitienė, A.; Dėdelė, A.; Sarantaki, A. Associations Between Endocrine-Disrupting Chemical Exposure and Fertility Outcomes: A Decade of Human Epidemiological Evidence. Life 2025, 15, 993. https://doi.org/10.3390/life15070993
Tzouma Z, Dourou P, Diamanti A, Harizopoulou V, Papalexis P, Karampas G, Liepinaitienė A, Dėdelė A, Sarantaki A. Associations Between Endocrine-Disrupting Chemical Exposure and Fertility Outcomes: A Decade of Human Epidemiological Evidence. Life. 2025; 15(7):993. https://doi.org/10.3390/life15070993
Chicago/Turabian StyleTzouma, Zoe, Panagiota Dourou, Athina Diamanti, Vikentia Harizopoulou, Petros Papalexis, Grigorios Karampas, Alina Liepinaitienė, Audrius Dėdelė, and Antigoni Sarantaki. 2025. "Associations Between Endocrine-Disrupting Chemical Exposure and Fertility Outcomes: A Decade of Human Epidemiological Evidence" Life 15, no. 7: 993. https://doi.org/10.3390/life15070993
APA StyleTzouma, Z., Dourou, P., Diamanti, A., Harizopoulou, V., Papalexis, P., Karampas, G., Liepinaitienė, A., Dėdelė, A., & Sarantaki, A. (2025). Associations Between Endocrine-Disrupting Chemical Exposure and Fertility Outcomes: A Decade of Human Epidemiological Evidence. Life, 15(7), 993. https://doi.org/10.3390/life15070993