Maternal use of nitrosatable drugs during pregnancy and adult male reproductive health: A population‐based cohort study

Author:

Clemmensen Pernille Jul1ORCID,Brix Nis12,Schullehner Jörg13,Toft Gunnar4,Søgaard Tøttenborg Sandra56ORCID,Sørig Hougaard Karin67,Bjerregaard Anne Ahrendt89,Halldorsson Thorhallur Ingi810,Olsen Sjurdur Frodi68,Hansen Birgitte11,Stayner Leslie Thomas12,Sigsgaard Torben1313,Kolstad Henrik1415,Bonde Jens Peter Ellekilde56,Ramlau‐Hansen Cecilia Høst1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Public Health Aarhus University Aarhus Denmark

2. Department of Clinical Genetics Aarhus University Hospital Aarhus Denmark

3. Danish Big Data Centre for Environment and Health (BERTHA) Aarhus University Aarhus Denmark

4. Steno Diabetes Center Aarhus Aarhus University Hospital Aarhus Denmark

5. Department of Occupational and Environmental Medicine Copenhagen University Hospital ‐ Bispebjerg and Frederiksberg Kobenhavn Denmark

6. Department of Public Health University of Copenhagen Kobenhavn Denmark

7. National Research Centre for the Working Environment Kobenhavn Denmark

8. Department of Epidemiology Research Statens Serum Institut Kobenhavn Denmark

9. Center for Clinical Research and Prevention Copenhagen University Hospital ‐ Bispebjerg and Frederiksberg Kobenhavn Denmark

10. Faculty of Food Science and Nutrition School of Health Sciences University of Iceland Reykjavik Iceland

11. Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland Aarhus Denmark

12. Division of Epidemiology and Biostatistics School of Public Health University of Illinois at Chicago Chicago Illinois USA

13. CIRRAU – Centre for Integrated Register‐based Research at Aarhus University Aarhus Denmark

14. Department of Occupational Medicine Aarhus University Hospital Aarhus Denmark

15. Department of Clinical Medicine Aarhus University Aarhus Denmark

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundPrenatal exposures to xenobiotics during the masculinization programming window are suggested to impact male fecundity later in life. Frequently used nitrosatable drugs, such as penicillins and beta2‐agonists, contain amines or amides that may form teratogenic compounds in reaction with nitrite.ObjectivesWe explored whether maternal nitrosatable drug use during gestation was associated with biomarkers of male fecundity in adulthood; moreover, the potential modifiable effect of nitrate and vitamin intake was investigated.MethodWe performed a cohort study in the Fetal Programming of Semen Quality cohort that includes semen characteristics, reproductive hormone concentrations, and measures of testis size on 1058 young adult sons in the Danish National Birth Cohort. Information on maternal use of nitrosatable drugs was obtained from questionnaires and interviews around gestational weeks 11 and 16. A multivariable negative binomial regression model was used to obtain relative differences in biomarkers of male fecundity for those whose mothers used nitrosatable drugs compared to those without such maternal use. In sub‐analyses, the exposure was categorized according to nitrosatable drug type: secondary amine, tertiary amine, or amide. We investigated dose dependency by examining the number of weeks with intake and explored potential effect modification by low versus high maternal nitrate and vitamin intake from diet and nitrate concentration in drinking water. We added selection weights and imputed values of missing covariates to limit the risk of selection bias.ResultsIn total, 19.6% of the study population were born of mothers with an intake of nitrosatable drugs at least once during early pregnancy. Relative differences in biomarkers related to male fecundity between exposed and unexposed participants were negligible. Imputation of missing covariates did not fundamentally alter the results. Furthermore, no sensitive subpopulations were detected.ConclusionsThe results suggest that maternal use of nitrosatable drugs does not have a harmful influence on the male fecundity of the offspring.

Funder

Helsefonden

Publisher

Wiley

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