Disinfectants
cause birth defects in baby mice
By Brian Bienkowski
for Environmental Health News
Common cleaners used
in homes, hotels and hospitals cause birth defects in fetuses, according to a
new study of mice.
In some cases just
being in the same room with the chemicals was enough to increase birth defects
in the mice.
The scientists involved say they can’t draw any conclusions for exposed humans but “animal studies are the gold standard for predicting human health effects,” said Terry Hrubec, professor and researcher at Virginia Tech University and lead author of the study published today in the journal Birth Defects Research.
The scientists involved say they can’t draw any conclusions for exposed humans but “animal studies are the gold standard for predicting human health effects,” said Terry Hrubec, professor and researcher at Virginia Tech University and lead author of the study published today in the journal Birth Defects Research.
People are exposed
“every day to these chemicals,” she added.
The chemicals,
called quaternary ammonium compounds, or
“quats”, are often found in cleaning products and disinfectants used in
people’s homes as well as at hotels and hospitals because they’re efficient at
cleaning bacteria and viruses.
Quats
are also found in some laundry detergents, treatments for swimming pools, food
preservatives in packed produce, and personal care products such as shampoos
and conditioners.
Industry
representatives have pushed back, saying all cleaning products get federal
approval before hitting the shelves.
Hrubec and colleagues
found that male and female mice exposed to two types of common quats—alkyl
dimethyl benzyl ammonium chloride (ADBAC) and didecyl dimethyl ammonium
chloride (DDAC)—had pups with much higher rates of birth defects than unexposed
mice.
The defects “persisted
for two generations after cessation of exposure,” the authors wrote.
Perhaps most
surprising was that the mice didn’t even need to be directly dosed—just using
quat-containing disinfectants in the rooms led to increased birth defect rates.
Before researchers
used the disinfectants in the rooms, about 1 out of every 1,000 embryos had a
neural tube defect.
After the chemicals
were used in the rooms, the birth defect shot up to 15 percent after the
chemicals were used in the rooms.
“That was a little
startling, just normal use of cleaner is sufficient to cause the birth
defects,” Hrubec said.
Pat Hunt, senior
author of the study and a researcher at Washington State University, said it’s
likely the mice in the room were exposed both through their skin and through
inhalation.
“In our original
studies, we found that [quats] persist in the environment because it took
months for levels to drop after the use of these disinfectants was discontinued
in the facility,” she said.
Also just exposing the
males, and not the females, was enough to cause birth defects in the pups.
“Normally we think of maternal environmental exposures and offspring, but we
saw effects when only exposing fathers,” Hrubec said.
The defects were
neural tube defects, which are defects of the brain or spinal cord, Hrubec
said. The two most common neural tube defects are spina bifida and anencephaly,
which annually affect about 1,460 and 859 babies respectively in the United
States.
About 150,000 to
200,000 babies born in the United States every year have a physical birth
defect. There are many suspected culprits, Hrubec said, including genetic
causes, use of therapeutic drugs and environmental chemicals.
Folic acid,
mandated a decade ago as an additive in domestic grain products, helps prevent
neural tube defects.
While it’s not clear
if quats could have the same impacts on human babies, the sheer amount of the
chemicals and our likely consistent exposure are a concern.
More than 1 million pounds of quats are made every
year in the U.S., Hrubec and colleagues wrote, with no health studies assessing
human exposure.
“We
don’t know how much of quats are stored in us, or in which tissues they’re
stored,” Hrubec said.
Hunt
said one obvious concern is people who work in places with heavy disinfectant
use, such as hospitals.
Mary
Alice Smith, a retired professor and researcher from the University of Georgia,
said one of the major strengths of Hrubec's study is that the mice were exposed
to a mixture of quats that are likely similar to exposures seen in humans.
Cleaning
product manufacturers, however, stand by their products’ safety. Roxanne Smith,
vice president of communications for the Consumer Specialty Products
Association, said in a statement that the study was misleading.
"These
concentrated disinfectants are used in institutional settings, such as
hospitals and other health care facilities, and are not designed for household
consumer use," she said, adding that people are trained on the safety in
using such disinfectants.
Prior to bringing
products to market, The Clorox Company, which makes a suite of cleaning
products some of which contain quats, “rigorously tests the product’s safety
and quality to ensure that it meets local, state and federal regulations,” said
spokesperson Rita Gorenberg in an emailed response to Hrubec’s study.
She said Clorox didn’t
have time to fully evaluate the study but that product safety is a top priority
for Clorox.
Quats have long been
thought of as safe and, therefore, have been little studied. That may change.
This study comes three
years after Hrubec and other
researchers found that mice exposed to quats took longer to get
pregnant, had fewer pups and suffered more miscarriages than non-exposed mice.
And just last
year Hrubec’s lab
reported that mice exposed to quats had decreased fertility,
with males’ sperm decreased and females having fewer ovulations and getting
pregnant less frequently.
Hrubec said the next
research step is the figure is to examine quats and human. “We really need to
find out more on what happens to quats once they get into our body,” she said.
For questions or
feedback about this piece, contact Brian Bienkowski at bbienkowski@ehn.org.