Abstract

STUDY QUESTIONDo sex and maternal smoking effects on human fetal anogenital distance (AGD) persist in a larger study and how do these data integrate with the wider literature on perinatal human AGD, especially with respect to sex differences?SUMMARY ANSWERSecond trimester sex differences in AGD are broadly consistent with neonatal and infant measures of AGD and maternal cigarette smoking is associated with a temporary increase in male AGD in the absence of changes in circulating testosterone.WHAT IS KNOWN ALREADYAGD is a biomarker of fetal androgen exposure, a reduced AGD in males being associated with cryptorchidism, hypospadias and reduced penile length. Normative fetal AGD data remain partial and windows of sensitivity of human fetal AGD to disruption are not known.STUDY DESIGN, SIZE, DURATIONThe effects of fetal sex and maternal cigarette smoking on the second trimester (11–21 weeks of gestation) human fetal AGD were studied, along with measurement of testosterone and testicular transcripts associated with apoptosis and proliferation.PARTICIPANTS/MATERIALS, SETTING METHODSAGD, measured from the centre of the anus to the posterior/caudal root of penis/clitoris (AGDapp) was determined in 56 female and 70 male morphologically normal fetuses. These data were integrated with current literature on perinatal AGD in humans.MAIN RESULTS AND THE ROLE OF CHANCEAt 11–13 weeks of gestation male fetal AGDapp was 61% (P< 0.001) longer than in females, increasing to 70% at 17–21 weeks. This sexual dimorphism was independent of growth characteristics (fetal weight, length, gonad weight). We confirmed that at 14–16 weeks of gestation male fetal AGDapp was increased 28% (P < 0.05) by in utero cigarette smoke exposure. Testosterone levels were not affected by smoking. To develop normative data, our findings have been integrated with available data from in vivo ultrasound scans and neonatal studies. Inter-study variations in male/female AGD differences lead to the conclusion that normalization and standardization approaches should be developed to enable confidence in comparing data from different perinatal AGD studies.LIMITATIONS, REASONS FOR CAUTIONSex differences, and a smoking-dependent increase in male fetal AGD at 14–16 weeks, identified in a preliminary study, were confirmed with a larger number of fetuses. However, human fetal AGD should, be re-assessed once much larger numbers of fetuses have been studied and this should be integrated with more detailed analysis of maternal lifestyle. Direct study of human fetal genital tissues is required for further mechanistic insights.WIDER IMPLICATIONS OF THE FINDINGSFetal exposure to cigarette smoke chemicals is known to lead to reduced fertility in men and women. Integration of our data into the perinatal human AGD literature shows that more work needs to be done to enable reliable inter-study comparisons.STUDY FUNDING/COMPETING INTEREST(S)The study was supported by grants from the Chief Scientist Office (Scottish Executive, CZG/1/109 & CZG/4/742), NHS Grampian Endowments (08/02), the European Community's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007-2013) under grant agreement no 212885 and the Medical Research Council, UK (MR/L010011/1). The authors declare they have no competing interests, be it financial, personal or professional.

Highlights

  • It is known that anogenital distance (AGD) reflects in utero masculinization (Dean and Sharpe, 2013) and in newborn humans AGD is very clearly sexually dimorphic

  • We have extended our initial study to increase the number of second trimester human fetuses and have attempted to integrate these data into the published literature in order to generate a more complete understanding of changes in human AGD during the fetal and neonatal period

  • If the period of study is divided into three developmental windows (Table II), both AGDapp and AGDapp normalized to ponderal index were significantly shorter in female fetuses at all three periods, with female/male ratios of 61% (P, 0.001), 63% (P, 0.01) and 70% (P, 0.01) at 11–13, 14–16 and 17–21 weeks, respectively

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Summary

Introduction

It is known that anogenital distance (AGD) reflects in utero masculinization (Dean and Sharpe, 2013) and in newborn humans AGD is very clearly sexually dimorphic. The data reported in (Fowler et al, 2011b) must be considered preliminary, in terms of the sample number and there has been further work reported which extends our knowledge of AGD in humans during the third trimester and up to 24 months post-natally (Thankamony et al, 2009; Gilboa et al, 2014) For these reasons, we have extended our initial study to increase the number of second trimester human fetuses and have attempted to integrate these data into the published literature in order to generate a more complete understanding of changes in human AGD during the fetal and neonatal period

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