Review article
Environmental exposure to non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs and potential contribution to eggshell thinning in birds

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envint.2022.107638Get rights and content
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open access

Highlights

  • Laboratory studies indicate non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) can cause eggshell thinning in birds.

  • NSAIDs cause eggshell thinning through cyclooxygenase inhibition, similarly to DDT.

  • Significant exposures and body burdens of NSAIDs have been observed in wild birds.

  • Environmental exposure of NSAIDs could potentially impair reproduction in wild birds.

Abstract

Abnormally thin eggshells can reduce avian reproductive success, and have caused rapid population declines. The best known examples of this phenomenon are the widespread population crashes in birds, mostly raptors, fish eating birds, and scavengers, caused by the pesticide DDT and its isomers in the 1960s. A variety of other chemicals have been reported to cause eggshell thinning. Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), which are extensively and increasingly used in human and veterinary medicine, may be one particularly concerning group of chemicals that demonstrate an ability to impair eggshell development, based both on laboratory studies and on their known mechanism of action. In this review, we outline environmental and wildlife exposure to NSAIDs, describe the process of eggshell formation, and discuss pathways affected by NSAIDs. We list pharmaceuticals, including NSAIDs, and other compounds demonstrated to reduce eggshell thickness, and highlight their main mechanisms of action. Dosing studies empirically demonstrated that NSAIDs reduce eggshell thickness through cyclooxygenase inhibition, which suppresses prostaglandin synthesis and reduces the calcium available for the mineralization of eggshell. Using the US EPA’s CompTox Chemicals Dashboard, we show that NSAIDs are predicted to strongly inhibit cyclooxygenases. NSAIDs have been observed both in the putative diet of scavenging birds, and we report examples of NSAIDs detected in eggs or tissues of wild and captive Old World vultures. We suggest that NSAIDs in the environment represent a hazard that could impair reproduction in wild birds.

Keywords

Eggshell thinning
NSAIDs
Environmental toxicology
Cyclooxygenase
Calcium

Data availability

No data was used for the research described in the article.

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