Women
exposed to higher levels of bisphenol A and certain phthalates may gain
slightly more weight over time, according to new research.
“We
found that these chemicals were associated with a small weight gain, though
their contribution may be minor compared with other factors, such as diet and
smoking,” said Dr. Qi Sun, a Harvard School of Public Health professor who was
senior author of the study.
Some
scientists suspect that hormone-disrupting chemicals may play a role in obesity
and weight gain.
Harvard
and Brown University epidemiologists compared levels of chemicals in the urine
of almost 1,000 U.S. women to their self-reported weight gain over a 10-year
period. The women on average gained 4.6 pounds over the 10 years.
Women
with the highest BPA reported gaining about half a pound more per year than
women with the lowest levels. BPA, used to make polycarbonate plastic and found
in some canned foods and other products, is found in virtually all people tested
nationwide.
Those
with the highest levels of certain phthalate breakdown products also gained
slightly more – between 0.75 and 1.25 more pounds per year – than
women with the lowest exposures, according to the study. Included were phthalic
acid, monobenzyl phthalates, which are found in vinyl and some food packaging,
and monobutyl phthalates, which are in vinyl and some food packaging and nail
polish. No association was found with other phthalates that are used as
fragrances.
BPA
and phthalates leave the body fairly quickly, so the research team said the
single test of urine may not accurately reflect long-term exposures. Chemical
manufacturers and other critics frequently have said such studies are
unreliable.
Experts
consider prospective studies like this one – in which health changes
are tracked over a period of time – to be the “gold standard” of
human epidemiology.
"Their
study design is very good," said Dr. Richard Stahlhut, an environmental
health researcher at the University of Missouri. However, for chemicals such as
BPA that are rapidly cleared from the body, "it’s just really hard to draw
any definitive conclusions about what the findings mean," Stahlhut said.
More information on long-term exposure is needed to draw strong conclusions, he
said.
It
may sound farfetched that exposure to a chemical could cause a woman to gain
more weight over the next 10 years. But Stahlhut said the single test could
reflect a pattern of continuing exposure because some people have fixed
behaviors. For example, a person with vinyl flooring may have higher phthalate
exposure, or someone who consistently eats a lot of canned foods could ingest
more BPA.
Sun
said if the results were purely coincidental or random, he would have expected
to sometimes see women with lower levels of chemicals gaining more weight than
women with higher levels.
“The
fact that we see such a strong pattern with only one exposure reading is highly
suggestive and warrants further study,” said Sun, who was the senior author of
the study, which was published in the International Journal of Obesity.
Some studies suggest chemicals can interfere
with estrogen signaling, triggering insulin resistance and obesity.
The
research is the first to link BPA and phthalates to weight changes over time,
although some previous studies reported that heavier people have
higher concentrations in their bodies.
There
was no link between the women’s weight and the chemicals at the beginning of
the Harvard study. In other words, women with higher levels were no more likely
to be obese or weigh more when their chemical levels were first tested.
On
average, the women in the study with higher levels of chemicals were younger,
exercised less and were more likely to be smokers. Their average age when the
samples were taken was 54. They were slightly overweight and weighed an average
of 156 pounds at the start of the study. Because the women recorded their own
weight, it’s possible that they could have gained less or more than they
reported to researchers.
More
stories from our archives about bisphenol A and phthalates.
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