Journal
of Toxicology and Environmental Health, Part B: Special Issue
on Endocrine Toxicants and Human Health Risks Volume 11. 2008.
J Toxicol Environ
Health B Crit Rev. 2008 Mar;11(3-4):149-51.
Endocrine toxicants
with emphasis on human health risks.
Phillips KP, Foster WG.
Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
Karen.Phillips@uottawa.ca
PMID:
18368549
J Toxicol Environ
Health B Crit Rev. 2008 Mar;11(3-4):152-61.
Toward less confusing terminology in endocrine disruptor research.
Foster WG, Agzarian
J.
Centre for Reproductive
Care and Reproductive Biology Division, Department of Obstetrics
and Gynecology, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, L8N
3Z5. fosterw@mcmaster.ca
The realization
that environmental contaminants interact with hormone receptors and
mimic or antagonize the actions of endogenous hormones led to introduction
of terms such as endocrine disruptor, endocrine disrupter, hormonally
active chemicals, and hormone mimics into the scientific and lay
press. Reports suggesting a link between exposure to chemicals adversely
affecting the endocrine system and (1) increasing rates of hormone-dependent
cancers (breast, prostate, and testicular), (2) developmental detrimental
effects in the male reproductive tract, (3) falling sperm counts,
and (4) endometriosis resulted in an explosion of research, regulatory
actions, and policy changes aimed at better understanding the hazards
posed by these chemicals with subsequent restriction in their use.
With increasing concern, there is worldwide action to develop testing
strategies to allow for early identification of chemicals possessing
endocrine disruptor activity. However, despite an expanding literature
and numerous expert panel meetings, there continues to be controversy
surrounding how to best define endocrine disruptors, resulting in
(1) ambiguous use of the term, (2) confusion in the literature, and
(3) publication of contentious lists of chemicals purported to be
endocrine disruptors. Herein it is argued in favor of a more restrictive
definition with adoption of a less ambiguous term, and in favor of
development of a classification system to enhance more effective
communication and facilitate appropriate allocation of limited resources
in this highly charged area of toxicology.
PMID:
18368550
J Toxicol Environ
Health B Crit Rev. 2008 Mar;11(3-4):162-76.
Environmental contaminants
and human infertility: hypothesis or cause for concern?
Foster WG, Neal
MS, Han MS, Dominguez MM.
Centre for Reproductive
Care and Reproductive Biology Division, Department of Obstetrics
and Gynecology, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. fosterw@mcmaster.ca
Throughout the
1980s and 1990s the crude human birth rate (live births per 1000
population) declined, indicating reduced fertility and suggesting
a potential decline in fecundity (the potential to conceive). Detection
of environmental contaminants in human tissues, together with reports
of a global decline in semen quality, further fueled speculation
that human infertility rates are increasing and environmental toxicants
are potentially important causal agents associated with this change.
However, there is little compelling evidence to suggest that infertility
rates amongst the general population have changed over time. Moreover,
recent studies suggest a rise in the fertility rates. While several
studies documented increased time to pregnancy (TTP) in exposed study
populations, other investigators were not able to replicate these
findings. Nevertheless, studies involving occupational exposure together
with results from animal experiments lend support to the conclusion
that environmental contaminants potentially adversely affect fertility.
Consequently, the impact of exposure to environmental contaminants
on human fertility remains controversial. To test the hypothesis
that environmental contaminant exposure was associated with enhanced
risk of infertility, data concerning trends in fertility and infertility
rates were examined to assess the impact of exposure of developing
gametes to environmental contaminants. The relationship between exposure
and reproductive outcomes was then examined to illustrate the range
of adverse effects for reproductive toxicants with data sets of divergent
depth and reliability. Data showed that only a weak association between
exposure to environmental contaminants and adverse effects on human
fertility exists. However, it is postulated that evidence of chemical
exposure and potential health consequences of these exposures highlight
the need for further research in this area.
PMID:
18368551
J Toxicol Environ
Health B Crit Rev. 2008 Mar;11(3-4):177-87.
Endocrine toxicants including 2,3,7,8-terachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD)
and dioxin-like chemicals and endometriosis: is there a link?
Foster WG.
Centre for Reproductive
Care, Hamilton Health Sciences, and Reproductive Biology Division,
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, McMaster University, Hamilton,
Ontario, Canada. fosterw@mcmaster.ca
Endometriosis is
a common gynecologic disease of unknown etiology affecting approximately
10-15% of women of reproductive age and 50% of infertile women. Estrogen
dependence and immune modulation are established features of endometriosis
but do not adequately explain the cause of this disorder. In recent
years evidence indicated that exposure to environmental toxicants
possessing estrogenic activity resulted in endometriosis. However,
scant hospital-based case-control studies yielded inconsistent findings
and thus did not provide a compelling argument for or against an
association between environmental toxicant exposure and endometriosis.
Results of animal studies and cell culture experiments, however,
suggested that it is biologically plausible for environmental toxicants
to affect the pathobiology of endometriosis. In this article, the
literature linking environmental toxicants with endometriosis was
reviewed and the link with endocrine toxicants discussed.
PMID:
18368552
J Toxicol Environ
Health B Crit Rev. 2008 Mar;11(3-4):188-220.
Human exposure
to endocrine disrupters and semen quality.
Phillips KP, Tanphaichitr
N.
Faculty of Health
Sciences, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. Karen.Phillips@uottawa.ca
Reproductive pathology
in the male represents about 20% of infertility cases. Male infertility
may be attributed to a number of causes, including genetic and congenital
abnormalities, infection, multisystemic diseases, varicocele, and
others; however, a significant number of cases are idiopathic. Global
declines in semen quality were suggested to be associated with enhanced
exposure to environmental chemicals that act as endocrine disrupters
as a result of our increased use of pesticides, plastics, and other
anthropogenic materials. A significant body of toxicology data based
upon laboratory and wildlife animals studies suggests that exposure
to certain endocrine disrupters is associated with reproductive toxicity,
including (1) abnormalities of the male reproductive tract (cryptorchidism,
hypospadias), (2) reduced semen quality, and (3) impaired fertility
in the adult. There is, however, a relative paucity of studies designed
to measure exposure to endocrine disrupters on semen quality parameters
(sperm concentration, motility, morphology). An overview of the human
semen quality literature is presented that examines the role of endocrine
disrupters including organochlorines (OC), dioxins, phthalates, phytoestrogens,
and chemical mixtures (pesticides and tobacco smoke).
PMID:
18368553
J Toxicol Environ
Health B Crit Rev. 2008 Mar;11(3-4):221-41.
The influence of
the environment and other exogenous agents on spontaneous abortion
risk.
Weselak M, Arbuckle
TE, Walker MC, Krewski D.
McLaughlin Centre
for Population Health Risk Assessment, Institute of Population Health,
University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. mandy_weselak@hc-sc.gc.ca
It is estimated
that close to 30% of all pregnancies end in spontaneous abortion.
Although about 60% of spontaneous abortions are thought to be due
to genetic, infectious, hormonal, and immunological factors, the
role of the environment remains poorly understood. Pregnancy involves
a delicate balance of hormonal and immunological functions, which
may be affected by environmental substances. Many toxic substances
that are persistent in the environment and accumulate in the fatty
tissues may disrupt this equilibrium. This overview addresses known
risk factors for spontaneous abortions and examines the role, if
any, that environmental factors (chemical and physical) may play
in the etiology of this adverse health outcome.
PMID:
18368554
J Toxicol Environ
Health B Crit Rev. 2008 Mar;11(3-4):242-59.
Role of hormonal
and other factors in human prostate cancer.
Wigle DT, Turner
MC, Gomes J, Parent ME.
McLaughlin Centre
for Population Health Risk Assessment, Institute of Population Health,
University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. don.wigle@sympatico.ca
American men have
a lifetime risk of about 18% for prostate cancer diagnosis. Large
international variations in prostate cancer risks and increased risks
among migrants from low- to high-risk countries indicate important
roles for environmental factors. Major known risk factors include
age, family history, and country/ethnicity. Type 2 diabetes appears
to reduce risk, while high birth weight and adult height are linked
to increased risk of aggressive prostate cancer. Limited evidence
supports an association with a history of sexually transmitted infections.
A previous meta-analysis of eight cohort studies indicated no associations
with plasma androgen, estrogen, or sex hormone binding globulin (SHBG)
levels. However, there were dose-response relationships with baseline
plasma testosterone levels in two studies that adjusted for other
serum hormones and obesity. Finasteride (a drug that blocks testosterone
activation) reduced prostate cancer risk by 25%. Low-frequency genes
linked to familial prostate cancer only explain a small fraction
of all cases. Sporadic cases were linked to relatively common polymorphisms
of genes involved in (1) androgen synthesis, activation, inactivation
and excretion, (2) hormone and vitamin D receptors, (3) carcinogen
metabolism, and (4) DNA repair. Epidemiologic evidence supports protective
roles for dietary selenium, vitamin E, pulses, tomatoes/lycopene,
and soy foods, and high plasma 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D levels. There
is inadequate evidence that vegetables, fruit, carotenoids, and vitamins
A and C reduce risk and that animal fat, alpha-linoleic acid, meat,
coffee, and tea increase risk. Two major cohort studies found dose-response
relationships with dietary calcium intake. Total dietary energy intake
may enhance risk. Limited evidence supports a protective role for
physical activity and elevated risk for farmers and other men with
occupational pesticide exposure, particularly to organochlorine compounds
and phenoxy herbicides. There is inadequate evidence for a relationship
with alcohol or smoking. Most known or suspected external risk factors
may act through hormonal mechanisms, but our review found little
supporting evidence, and substantial further research is needed.
PMID:
18368555
J Toxicol Environ
Health B Crit Rev. 2008 Mar;11(3-4):260-75.
Testicular cancer and hormonally active agents.
Garner M, Turner
MC, Ghadirian P, Krewski D, Wade M.
McLaughlin Center
for Population Health Risk Assessment, University of Ottawa, Ottawa,
Ontario, Canada.
Testicular cancer
(TC) is a rare form of cancer, accounting for 1% of all new cancer
cases in Canadian males. TC is the most common malignancy among young
men, aged 25-34 yr old. Over previous decades, the incidence of TC
has increased in many Western countries. Countries with a sufficiently
long period of cancer registration, such as Denmark, document this
trend back to the first half of the 20th century. The etiology of
TC remains poorly understood. Most of the established risk factors
are likely related to in utero events, including some factors that
are purported to be surrogate measures for exposure to endogenous
estrogens. The correlation of TC with other testicular abnormalities
and with pregnancy factors led to the proposal that these conditions
are a constellation of sequelae of impairment of testicular development
called testis dysgenesis syndrome. There is some limited evidence
suggesting that exposure to pharmacological estrogens may contribute
to some cases of TC. There is currently no compelling evidence that
exposure to environmental estrogenic or other hormonally active substances
is contributing to the rise in TC incidence observed in Western nations
over the last several decades; however, this question has not been
extensively studied. The (1) rarity of this condition in the population,
(2) long lag time between the presumed sensitive period during fetal
development and clinical appearance of the condition, and (3) lack
of a good animal model to study the progression of the disease have
greatly hindered the understanding of environmental influences on
TC risk.
PMID:
18368556
J Toxicol Environ
Health B Crit Rev. 2008 Mar;11(3-4):276-300.
Review of the etiology
of breast cancer with special attention to organochlorines as potential
endocrine disruptors.
Salehi F, Turner
MC, Phillips KP, Wigle DT, Krewski D, Aronson KJ.
McLaughlin Centre
for Population Health Risk Assessment, Institute of Population Health,
University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Canada.
Breast cancer is
the most frequently diagnosed cancer among Canadian women, accounting
for about 30% of all new cancer cases each year. Although the incidence
of breast cancer has increased over the past 50 years, the cause
of this rise is unknown. Risk factors for breast cancer may be classified
into four broad categories: (1) genetic/familial, (2) reproductive/hormonal,
(3) lifestyle, and (4) environmental. Established risk factors for
breast cancer include older age, later age at first full-term pregnancy,
no full-term pregnancies, postmenopausal obesity, and genetic factors.
However, these known risk factors cannot account for the majority
of cases. In the early 1990s, it was suggested that exposure to some
environmental chemicals such as organochlorine compounds may play
a causal role in the etiology of breast cancer through estrogen-related
pathways. The relationship between organochlorines and breast cancer
risk has been studied extensively in the past decade and more, and
at this point there is no clear evidence to support a causal role
of most organochlorine pesticides in the etiology of human breast
cancer, but more evidence is needed to assess risk associated with
polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs). Future studies need to consider
the combined effects of exposures, concentrate on vulnerable groups
such as those with higher levels of exposure, only consider exposures
occurring during the most etiologically relevant time periods, and
more thoroughly consider gene-environment interactions.
PMID:
18368557
J Toxicol Environ
Health B Crit Rev. 2008 Mar;11(3-4):301-21.
Risk factors for ovarian cancer: an overview with emphasis on hormonal
factors.
Salehi F, Dunfield
L, Phillips KP, Krewski D, Vanderhyden BC.
McLaughlin Center
for Population Health Risk Assessment, University of Ottawa, Ottawa,
Ontario, Canada.
Ovarian cancer
is the fifth most frequently occurring cancer among women and leading
cause of gynecological cancer deaths in North America. Although the
etiology of ovarian cancer is not clear, certain factors are implicated
in the etiology of this disease, such as ovulation, gonadotropic
and steroid hormones, germ cell depletion, oncogenes and tumor suppressor
genes, growth factors, cytokines, and environmental agents. Family
history of breast or ovarian cancer is a prominent risk factor for
ovarian cancer, with 5-10% of ovarian cancers due to heritable risk.
Reproductive factors such as age at menopause and infertility contribute
to greater risk of ovarian cancer, whereas pregnancy, tubal ligation,
and hysterectomy reduce risk. Oral contraceptive (OC) use has clearly
been shown to be protective against ovarian cancer. In contrast,
large epidemiologic studies found hormone replacement therapy (HRT)
to be a greater risk factor for ovarian cancer. The marked influence
of hormones and reproductive factors on ovarian cancer suggests that
endocrine disrupters may impact risk; however, there is a notable
lack of research in this area. Lifestyle factors such as cigarette
smoking, obesity, and diet may affect ovarian cancer risk. Exposure
to certain environmental agents such as talc, pesticides, and herbicides
may increase risk of ovarian cancer; however, these studies are limited.
Further research is needed to strengthen the database of information
from which an assessment of environmental and toxicological risk
factors for ovarian cancer can be made.\
PMID:
18368558
J Toxicol Environ
Health B Crit Rev. 2008 Mar;11(3-4):322-44.
Key developments
in endocrine disrupter research and human health.
Phillips KP, Foster
WG.
Faculty of Health
Sciences, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON, Canada. Karen.Phillips@uottawa.ca
Environmental etiologies
involving exposures to chemicals that mimic endogenous hormones are
proposed for a number of adverse human health effects, including
infertility, abnormal prenatal and childhood development, and reproductive
cancers (National Research Council, 1999; World Health Organization,
2002). Endocrine disrupters represent a significant area of environmental
research with important implications for human health. This article
provides an overview of some of the key developments in this field
that may enhance our ability to assess the human health risks posed
by exposure to endocrine disrupters. Advances in methodologies of
hazard identification (toxicogenomics, transcriptomics, proteomics,
metabolomics, bioinformatics) are discussed, as well as epigenetics
and emerging biological endpoints.
PMID:
18368559
J Toxicol Environ
Health B Crit Rev. 2008 Mar;11(3-4):345-50.
Risk communication
of endocrine-disrupting chemicals: improving knowledge translation
and transfer.
Tyshenko MG, Phillips
KP, Mehta M, Poirier R, Leiss W.
McLaughlin Centre
for Population Health Risk Assessment, Institute of Population Health,
University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. mtyshenk@uottawa.ca
Public perception
of the negative effects of endocrine-disrupting chemicals appears
to be higher compared to other chemical pollutants, due to (1) chronic,
low-probability effects, and (2) uncertainties about which biological
effects may be relevant for human health. Individuals, both expert
and lay public, require credible, trustworthy, and understandable
information about the scientific evidence of endocrine-disrupting
chemicals in order to make informed risk decisions. The creation
of a dedicated web site, http://www.emcom.ca, as a tool for knowledge
translation and transfer provides the general public with access
to scientific experts and bridges the gap between experts and nonexperts
through a two-way, interactive communications approach. By obtaining
accurate and credible information, individuals can make better-informed
decisions concerning endocrine-disrupting chemicals.
PMID:
18368560
J Toxicol Environ
Health B Crit Rev. 2008 Mar;11(3-4):351-72.
Assessing and managing
risks arising from exposure to endocrine-active chemicals.
Phillips KP, Foster
WG, Leiss W, Sahni V, Karyakina N, Turner MC, Kacew S, Krewski D.
Faculty of Health
Sciences, University of Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. Karen.Phillips@uottawa.ca
Managing risks
to human health and the environment produced by endocrine-active
chemicals (EAC) is dependent on sound principles of risk assessment
and risk management, which need to be adapted to address the uncertainties
in the state of the science of EAC. Quantifying EAC hazard identification,
mechanisms of action, and dose-response curves is complicated by
a range of chemical structure/toxicology classes, receptors and receptor
subtypes, and nonlinear dose-response curves with low-dose effects.
Advances in risk science including toxicogenomics and quantitative
structure-activity relationships (QSAR) along with a return to the
biological process of hormesis are proposed to complement existing
risk assessment strategies, including that of the Endocrine Disruptor
Screening and Testing Advisory Committee (EDSTAC 1998). EAC represents
a policy issue that has captured the public's fears and concerns
about environmental health. This overview describes the process of
EAC risk assessment and risk management in the context of traditional
risk management frameworks, with emphasis on the National Research
Council Framework (1983), taking into consideration the strategies
for EAC management in Canada, the United States, and the European
Union.
PMID:
18368561