Environmental Health and Preventive Medicine
Online ISSN : 1347-4715
Print ISSN : 1342-078X
ISSN-L : 1342-078X
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Urinary Bisphenol-A Concentration in Infertile Japanese Women and Its Association with Endometriosis: A Cross-Sectional Study
Hiroaki ITOHMotoki IWASAKITomoyuki HANAOKAHiroshi SASAKITadao TANAKAShoichiro TSUGANE
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2007 Volume 12 Issue 6 Pages 258-264

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Abstract

Objectives: Bisphenol A (BPA), a raw material commonly used in the manufacture of resins such as polycarbonate and epoxy, is a possible xenoestrogen that is hypothesized to disrupt the human endocrine system. Humans are widely exposed to BPA. We investigated the urinary concentration of BPA in infertile Japanese women and its possible association with endometriosis.
Materials and Methods: We recruited 166 women (aged 20–45) who had complained of infertility and visited a university hospital in Tokyo. The subjects were interviewed and their urine samples were obtained prior to a laparoscopic diagnosis of endometriosis between January 2000 and December 2001. Urinary total BPA concentration in 140 eligible urine samples was then measured using enzymatic deconjugation of glucuronide and sulfate and high-performance liquid chromatography isotope-dilution tandem mass spectrometry.
Results: Median (25th–75th percentile) unadjusted and creatinine-adjusted urinary BPA concentrations were 1.6 (0.69–2.8) μg/L and 0.80 (0.45–1.3) μg/g creatinine. No significant monotonic association of endometriosis with urinary BPA concentration was observed. Median urinary BPA concentration in women with stage 0–I endometriosis (0.74 μg/g creatinine) did not significantly differ from that in those with stage II–IV endometriosis (0.93 μg/g creatinine) (p for difference=0.24).
Conclusions: This study, based on a larger number of samples than those in previous studies in Japan and using the most reliable analytical method currently available, showed that urinary concentrations of BPA in women who consulted a physician for infertility were not higher than those in other populations. Moreover, no association between urinary BPA concentration and endometriosis was found in this cross-sectional study.

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© 2007 Japanese Society for Hygiene
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