Modeling adverse environmental impacts on the reproductive system

J Womens Health. 1999 Mar;8(2):217-26. doi: 10.1089/jwh.1999.8.217.

Abstract

When priority topics are being established for the study of women's health, it is generally agreed that one important area on which to focus research is reproduction. For example, increasing attention has been directed to environmental exposures that disrupt the endocrine system and alter reproduction. These concerns also suggest the need to give greater attention to the use of animal toxicologic testing to draw inferences about human reproductive risks. Successful reproduction requires multiple simultaneous and sequential processes in both the male and female, and the effect of toxicity on reproduction-related processes is time dependent. Currently, however, the risk assessment approach does not allow for the use of multiple processes or for considering the reproductive process response as a function of time. We discuss several issues in modeling exposure effects on reproductive function for risk assessment and present an overview of approaches for reproductive risk assessment. Recommendations are provided for an effective animal study design for determining reproductive risk that addresses optimization of the duration of dosing, observation of the effects of exposure on validated biomarkers, analysis of several biomarkers for complete characterization of the exposure on the underlying biologic processes, the need for longitudinally observed exposure effects, and a procedure for estimating human reproductive risk from the animal findings. An approach to characterizing reproductive toxicity to estimate the increased fertility risks in a dibromochloropropane (DBCP)-exposed human population is illustrated, using several reproductive biomarkers simultaneously from a longitudinal rabbit inhalation study of DBCP and an interspecies extrapolation method.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Biomarkers / analysis
  • Birth Rate
  • Environmental Exposure / adverse effects
  • Environmental Monitoring / methods
  • Environmental Pollutants / adverse effects*
  • Environmental Pollutants / analysis
  • Environmental Pollutants / toxicity
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Models, Biological*
  • Rabbits
  • Reproducibility of Results
  • Reproduction / drug effects
  • Reproduction / physiology*
  • Reproductive Medicine*
  • Risk Assessment
  • Sensitivity and Specificity
  • Sperm Count
  • Sperm Motility

Substances

  • Biomarkers
  • Environmental Pollutants