By Brian Bienkowski
for the Environmental Health News
Pregnant
women in Brooklyn with high levels of certain compounds used in makeup and
soaps were more likely to have preterm births and babies that weighed less,
according to a new study.
The
study, published online last week in the Journal of
Hazardous Materials, provides the first evidence that germ-killing
and preservative chemicals used in cosmetics and soaps might impact newborns’
health.
It also bolsters suspicions that chemicals in soaps and lotions disrupt
people’s endocrine systems, which are crucial for reproduction and babies’
development.
Industry
representatives, however, said that the study didn't determine where the
exposure to the chemicals came from and that preservatives in makeup make them
safer for people.
From
2007 to 2009, Geer and colleagues tested 185 mothers’ third trimester urine, as
well as the umbilical cord blood of 34 of them, for a suite of
different parabens, used mostly in cosmetics, and triclosan and triclocarban,
which are used as antimicrobials in soaps. The mothers were from the University
Hospital of Brooklyn’s Prenatal Clinic.
Women
with higher levels of butylparaben, a preservative in cosmetics, were more
likely to have babies with decreased birth weights and preterm births. Higher
levels of propylparaben, used in lotions and creams, were associated with
decreased body lengths in the newborns.
Triclocarban,
an antibacterial used in soaps and lotions, was linked to births happening
earlier in the pregnancy.
The
chemicals, especially the parabens, are common: According to the Environmental
Working Group’s Skin Deep database, butylparaben is used in 2,245 personal
care products, propylparaben is used in 7,212,
and triclocarban is used in 21.
The
results don’t prove that the chemicals are behind the birth problems. While
scientists know the chemicals have some biological activity, the amount of
exposure that could cause problems remains unclear.
Animals
exposed to the chemicals have had some reproductive impacts. In rats,
triclocarban impacted male sex organ development in a 2008 study. Paraben
exposure decreased male rat sperm counts and efficiency in a 2002 study. One of
the most studied endocrine disrupting chemicals, bisphenol-A or BPA, has been
linked to multiple birth defects.
Kurunthachalam
Kannan, a professor at the New York State Department of Health's Wadsworth
Center, said there are two plausible ways endocrine disrupting compounds could
impact fetal growth: through oxidative stress or through estrogen receptors.
Linda
Loretz, chief toxicologist at the Personal Care Products Council, said that
parabens, used as preservatives, actually keep makeup safer by preventing
microorganisms. She said such chemicals have been deemed safe by the Cosmetic
Ingredient Review, which tests cosmetics' ingredients. The Review is funded by
the Personal Care Products Council.
She
added Geer's study was "pretty limited."
"They
didn’t determine where exposures came from," she said.
Some
of the compounds tested had what Geer referred to as “protective” effects,
meaning higher levels of the pollutants meant increases in metrics such as
birth weights.
"They
saw both adverse and protective effects, which makes you wonder if it's more
noise than real effects," Loretz said.
Kannan
also pointed out the researchers did not see any potential impacts from
methylparaben, despite its similarity to butylparaben and the fact it was found
at higher levels.
Geer
said it’s not surprising to see such disparities when looking at exposure to
endocrine disruptors. Different chemicals act upon different hormones, which
are responsible for different aspects of fetal development.
Nearly
half the women tested were born outside the U.S., mostly from Caribbean
countries and the rest mostly African American, Geer said. “We don’t know if
there’s additional vulnerability … genetic or racial factors. Or there may be
differences in terms of product use,” she said.
Except
for some color additives, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration does not
regulate cosmetic ingredients. On its website about the safety of parabens, the
agency cites the Cosmetic Ingredient Review findings that parabens are safe in
cosmetics at levels up to 25 percent. Typically parabens constitute less than 1
percent.
Geer
said that given the vulnerabilities of the fetus, any endocrine disruption
could be dangerous. She said the next research step is to study potential
impacts from mixtures of different chemicals.
“Our bodies might be continually
eliminating them, but we’re also continually exposed,” she said.
While
exposure is pervasive, switching personal care products can greatly reduce a
woman's chemical load. When 100 teenage girls in Salinas, California, switched
from the lotions, makeup, and shampoos they usually use to ones free of known
endocrine disruptors, there was a 27 to 45 percent reduction in levels of
several chemicals, including phthalates, parabens and triclosan, in their urine
after just three days, according to a March study.
For
questions or feedback about this piece, contact Brian Bienkowski at bbienkowski@ehn.org.