Abstract

Acetaminophen is considered the safest antipyretic and analgesic medication for pregnant women. However, studies have reported that acetaminophen has endocrine disrupting properties and prenatal exposure has been associated with early life epigenetic changes and later life health outcomes. As the placenta is the central mediator of maternal and fetal interactions, exposure to acetaminophen during pregnancy could manifest as perturbations in the placenta epigenome. Here, we evaluated epigenome-wide cytosine-guanine dinucleotide (CpG) methylation in placental tissue in relation to maternal acetaminophen use during pregnancy in a cohort of 286 newborns born prior to 28 weeks gestation. According to maternal self-report, more than half (166 of 286) of the newborns were exposed to acetaminophen in utero. After adjustment for potential confounders, a total of 42 CpGs were identified to be differentially methylated at a false discovery rate < 0.05, with most displaying increased methylation as it relates to acetaminophen exposure. A notable gene that was significantly associated with acetaminophen is the prostaglandin receptor (PTGDR) which plays an essential role in mediating placental blood flow and fetal growth. Moreover, for 6 of the 42 CpGs, associations of acetaminophen use with methylation were significantly different between male and female placentas; 3 CpG sites were associated with acetaminophen use in the male placenta and 3 different sites were associated with acetaminophen use in the female placenta (Pinteraction < 0.2). These findings highlight a relationship between maternal acetaminophen use during pregnancy and the placental epigenome and suggest that the responses for some CpG sites are sex dependent.

Highlights

  • Acetaminophen (N-actyl-4-aminophenol), known as paracetamol, is one of the most widely used analgesic and antipyretic drugs in the world [1, 2]

  • A notable gene that was significantly associated with acetaminophen is the prostaglandin receptor (PTGDR) which plays an essential role in mediating placental blood flow and fetal growth

  • Several studies have demonstrated that acetaminophen has endocrine disrupting activities and may alter neurodevelopment and reproductive development of offspring exposed prenatally [32, 37, 38]

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Summary

Introduction

Acetaminophen (N-actyl-4-aminophenol), known as paracetamol, is one of the most widely used analgesic and antipyretic drugs in the world [1, 2]. Acetaminophen is classified as a Category B drug (i.e. no risks observed in pregnant women) by the U.S Food and Drug Administration [4]. Several epidemiologic studies have observed associations between prenatal acetaminophen exposure with adverse birth and later life health outcomes. Prenatal acetaminophen use has been linked to low birth weight, birth defects, miscarriages, and preterm birth [8, 9]. Acetaminophen use in pregnancy has been associated with an increased risk of cryptorchidism and hypospadias in male infants [14]. Given these findings, more research is needed to characterize the potential underlying molecular mechanisms by which prenatal acetaminophen exposure may influence childhood health

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