Persistent organic pollutants, pre-pregnancy use of combined oral contraceptives, age, and time-to-pregnancy in the SELMA cohort.
Richelle D BjörvangChris GenningsPing-I LinGhada HusseinHannu KivirantaPanu RantakokkoPäivi RuokojärviChristian H LindhPauliina DamdimopoulouCarl-Gustaf BornehagPublished in: Environmental health : a global access science source (2020)
Serum concentrations of selected POPs, both as individual chemicals and as a mixture, were significantly associated with lower fecundability and increased odds of infertility in women aged 29 years and above not using COC as their most recent pre-pregnancy contraceptive. Our findings suggest that pre-pregnancy use of oral contraceptive and age may modify the link between POPs and fecundability. The differences of specific chemicals in the individual analysis and as a mixture support the need to study combination effects of chemicals when evaluating reproductive outcomes.