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Maternal–Foetal Effects of Exposure to Bisphenol A: Outcomes and Long-Term Consequences

Applied Sciences 2025 2 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Henrique Eloi Costa, Inês Medeiros, Melissa Mariana, Elisa Cairrão

Summary

This review examined the effects of bisphenol A (BPA), a widely used plasticizer, on pregnant women and developing fetuses by analyzing human epidemiological and experimental studies. Researchers found evidence that maternal BPA exposure can affect multiple body systems in both the mother and the growing embryo. The findings highlight that current safety thresholds may not adequately account for the heightened vulnerability during pregnancy.

Exposure to bisphenol A (BPA), one of the most widely produced plasticisers, can have a major effect on the growing embryo and the mother during pregnancy; as this is the most vulnerable period, the cutoff established in the legislation does not take this factor into account. Thus, this narrative review aims to highlight the consequences for the foetus and the pregnant woman of maternal and foetal exposure to BPA by analysing epidemiological and experimental studies on humans. Extensive research has examined the effects of BPA on several systems outcomes. Specifically, BPA exposure affects the immune system of the offspring and promotes the development of respiratory diseases, including asthma and wheezing. Moreover, BPA has been negatively associated with children’s neurodevelopment, leading to behavioural changes; autism; and reproductive changes, mainly deviations in anogenital distance, sexual hormone levels and sexual maturation, which can result in infertility. Furthermore, in mothers, BPA exposure may be linked to pre-eclampsia and gestational diabetes mellitus and affects birth parameters, leading to a higher risk of preterm delivery, shorter birth lengths and lower birth weights, although the results were not always consistent. These results demonstrate the urgent need for stricter legislation banning the use of BPA during pregnancy to reduce the hazards to the health and development of the foetus and the unborn child.

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