Objective: Since maternal smoking causes fetal circulatory abnormalities, as well as disturbances of the maternal endocrine equilibrium, we measured the PRL, hGH and insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) concentrations in the cord and venous blood of neonates of smoking mothers to determine whether or not the tobacco smoke affects the endocrine status of the neonate.
Design: The above hormones were measured in the cord blood of the newborns of both smoking and non-smoking mothers. Also, PRL and hGH were determined at 24 and 72 hours after birth in newborns of both groups.
Patients: Fifty-three newborns of smoking and 47 newborns of non-smoking mothers were investigated. Seventeen of the newborns of the smoking and 21 of the non-smoking mothers were preterm. The remainder were full-term.
Measurements: PRL was measured with a solid-phase immunoradiometric assay, hGH with a solid-phase two-site immunoradiometric assay and IGF-I with a solid-phase radioimmunoassay after extraction with acid-ethanol.
Results: The median value of PRL in the 17 preterm newborns of smoking mothers was 4941 mU/I (range 1322-7230), whereas in the 21 preterm newborns of non-smoking mothers it was 2013 mU/I (range 243-4740) (P = 0.0002). The median hGH value in the above subjects was 102.0 mU/I (range 35.2-208.4) and 59.8 mU/I (range 11.6-134.2), respectively (P = 0.0039). The median IGF-I was 580.7 U/I (range 253.2-4851.1) and 530.6 U/I (range 239.6-3591.5), respectively (P = 0.429). In the 36 full-term newborns of smoking mothers the median PRL value was 5171 mU/I (range 2074-7530), whereas in the 26 full-term newborns of non-smoking mothers it was 5081 (range 244-6540) (P = 0.048). The median hGH was 69.6 mU/I (range 42.3-280.0) and 32.2 mU/I (range 6.2-200.0), respectively (P = 0.0031). Also, the median IGF-I value was 926.3 U/I (range 348.5-5344.7) and 462.1 U/I (range 250.2-1578.7), respectively (P = 0.0024). On the 3rd day the PRL in the preterm neonates of both smoking and non-smoking mothers showed the same 16.5% drop, and thus the difference between the groups was maintained. A similar reduction in the hormone levels was observed in the full term neonates.
Conclusions: The findings indicate that the maternal tobacco-smoking causes disturbances of the endocrine status of the fetus, as shown by the increased levels of PRL, hGH and IGF-I, which are more pronounced between 30 and 37 weeks of gestation than at term.