BPA
levels in humans dramatically underestimated
Washington
State University
Researchers have developed a more accurate method of measuring bispehnol A (BPA) levels in humans and found that exposure to the endocrine-disrupting chemical is far higher than previously assumed.
The
study, published in the journal The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology on
Dec. 5, provides the first evidence that the measurements relied upon by
regulatory agencies, including the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, are
flawed, underestimating exposure levels by as much as 44 times.
"This
study raises serious concerns about whether we've been careful enough about the
safety of this chemical," said Patricia Hunt, Washington State University
professor and corresponding author on the paper. "What it comes down to is
that the conclusions federal agencies have come to about how to regulate BPA
may have been based on inaccurate measurements."
BPA
can be found in a wide range of plastics, including food and drink containers,
and animal studies have shown that it can interfere with the body's hormones.
In particular, fetal exposure to BPA has been linked to problems with growth,
metabolism, behavior, fertility and even greater cancer risk.
Despite this experimental evidence, the FDA has evaluated data from studies measuring BPA in human urine and determined that human exposure to the chemical is at very low, and therefore, safe levels. This paper challenges that assumption and raises questions about other chemicals, including BPA replacements, that are also assessed using indirect methods.
Hunt's
colleague, Roy Gerona, assistant professor at University of California, San
Francisco, developed a direct way of measuring BPA that more accurately
accounts for BPA metabolites, the compounds that are created as the chemical
passes through the human body.
Previously,
most studies had to rely on an indirect process to measure BPA metabolites,
using an enzyme solution made from a snail to transform the metabolites back
into whole BPA, which could then be measured.
Gerona's
new method is able to directly measure the BPA metabolites themselves without
using the enzyme solution.
In
this study, a research team comprised of Gerona, Hunt and Fredrick vom Saal of
University of Missouri compared the two methods, first with synthetic urine
spiked with BPA and then with 39 human samples.
They found much higher levels of BPA using the direct method, as much as 44 times the mean reported by the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES). The disparity between the two methods increased with more BPA exposure: the greater the exposure the more the previous method missed.
They found much higher levels of BPA using the direct method, as much as 44 times the mean reported by the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES). The disparity between the two methods increased with more BPA exposure: the greater the exposure the more the previous method missed.
Gerona,
the first author on the paper, said more replication is needed.
"I
hope this study will bring attention to the methodology used to measure BPA,
and that other experts and labs will take a closer look at and assess
independently what is happening," he said.
The
research team is conducting further experiments into BPA measurement as well as
other chemicals that may also have been measured in this manner, a category
that includes environmental phenols such as parabens, benzophenone, triclosan
found in some cosmetics and soaps, and phthalates found in many consumer
products including toys, food packaging and personal care products.
"BPA
is still being measured indirectly through NHANES, and it's not the only
endocrine-disrupting chemical being measured this way," Gerona said.
"Our hypothesis now is that if this is true for BPA, it could be true for
all the other chemicals that are measured indirectly."
This
study was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health.