# Estrogen-containing contraceptive use and blood lead concentrations in a cohort of premenopausal individuals

**Authors:** Lauren E. Chapman, Mandy S. Hall, Arianna Foster, Donna D. Baird, Quaker E. Harmon, Robert O. Wright, Julio A. Landero, Renee Heffron, Lauren A. Wise, Ganesa Wegienka, Ruth J. Geller, Amelia K. Wesselink, Samantha Schildroth, Janet E. Hall, Erik J. Tokar, Kristen Upson

PMC · DOI: 10.1016/j.envres.2025.122935 · Environmental research · 2026-02-12

## TL;DR

This study found that using estrogen-containing contraceptives may be linked to lower blood lead levels in premenopausal women.

## Contribution

The novel finding is that estrogen-containing contraception is associated with reduced blood lead concentrations.

## Key findings

- Current users of estrogen-containing contraception had 11% lower blood lead concentrations compared to non-users.
- Combined oral contraceptive users had 10% lower blood lead concentrations, and vaginal ring/patch users had 18% lower concentrations.

## Abstract

After exposure, toxic metal lead is stored in the skeleton and is mobilized to systemic circulation with bone turnover. Given the bone-conserving properties of estrogen, we investigated whether current use of estrogen-containing contraception is associated with lower blood lead concentrations. We conducted a cross-sectional analysis using enrollment data from the Study of Environment, Lifestyle & Fibroids (SELF), a cohort of 1693 Black women ages 23–35 years enrolled in years 2010–2012. The study population was restricted to non-users of injectable hormonal contraception with questionnaire data on hormonal contraceptive use and laboratory data on whole blood lead concentrations (n = 1549). The geometric mean blood lead concentrations for current users of estrogen-containing contraception and non-users were 0.41 μg/dl (95 % CI: 0.39–0.43) and 0.51 μg/dl (95 % CI: 0.50–0.52), respectively. After adjusting for age, education, current smoking status, alcohol consumption, recency of injectable contraceptive hormone use, and recent birth using a multivariable linear regression model to estimate the percent difference in blood lead concentrations, current use of estrogen-containing contraception was associated with an 11 % lower blood-lead concentrations (95 % CI: −16 %, −5 %). In exploratory analyses considering contraceptive type, current combined oral contraceptive users (n = 187) had 10 % lower blood lead concentrations (95 % CI: −16 %, −4 %) and contraceptive vaginal ring/transdermal patch users (n = 33) had 18 % lower blood lead concentrations (95 % CI: −29 %, −5 %) compared with non-users. Given the known toxic effects of lead and the common use of estrogen-containing contraception, further research is warranted to confirm our observation of lower blood lead concentrations with current use of estrogen-containing contraception.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** lead (PubChem CID 5352425)

## Full-text entities

- **Chemicals:** alcohol (MESH:D000438), Estrogen-containing contraceptive (-), lead (MESH:D007854)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

_Full body text omitted from this summary view._ Fetch the complete paper as Markdown: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12900035/full.md

## References

44 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12900035/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12900035