Amid inadequate testing and a lack of regulation, we’re all eating “forever chemicals.”
Elizabeth
Gribkoff for the Environmental Health News
photo credit: Rosalind Chang/Unsplash
After
a much-publicized study this year found high levels of a
toxic chemical class in food wrappings, many of us are eyeing that pizza or
to-go salad in a new light.
Experts
warn, though, that we shouldn’t just be concerned about exposure from packaged
food. The compounds, PFAS, short for per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances,
appear to be widespread in our food supply . PFAS have
contaminated dairy and beef farms in Maine and Michigan, and recent
testing from the consumer wellness site Mamavation found
evidence of the compounds in organic pasta sauces, canola oils and nut butters.
But
little is known about how much PFAS Americans are eating. In contrast to
drinking water, which is extensively studied, “we have only anecdotal evidence
for understanding (other) PFAS exposure sources for the U.S. general
population,” Elsie Sunderland, a professor of environmental chemistry at
Harvard University, testified to the federal House Committee
on Science, Space and Technology at the end of 2021.
Advocates and some researchers say the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s efforts to test for and regulate PFAS in food are inadequate, and the agency has likely underestimated health risks from our routine exposure.
More
broadly, because PFAS can get into food in many ways, the issue “further
highlights the need to stop creating and emitting PFAS globally,” Courtney
Carignan, an exposure scientist and environmental epidemiologist at Michigan
State University, told EHN.
PFAS
in food
PFAS, a group of more than 9,000 man-made compounds, are known for their ability to repel water and oil and withstand high heat. These properties have made them useful in products ranging from firefighting foam to makeup to nonstick pans — and mean they take a long time to break down in the environment and in our bodies, earning them the moniker “forever chemicals.”
This
longevity is problematic because some PFAS have been linked to certain kinds of
cancer, heart disease, liver damage, lowered vaccine effectiveness, lower birth
weights and other health effects. PFAS do “a really good job at crossing the
placenta,” Stephanie Eick, an environmental and reproductive epidemiologist at
Emory University, told EHN, adding that prenatal exposure to PFAS has been
linked to cardiac issues and other problems later in life. Evidence is mounting
that some newer PFAS are likely unsafe as
well.
The
European Union, which has more extensive PFAS testing and regulation than the
U.S., has set a low combined suggested
weekly food limit for four types of PFAS, estimating that most exceed this
safety threshold. The U.S., meanwhile, only has drinking water health
advisories for two PFAS compounds.
PFAS
can get into the food we eat in a number of ways, from leaching off of food packaging
coatings to contamination on farms. In a recent analysis, the Environmental
Working Group estimated that the common practice of spreading sewage sludge for
fertilizer could have contaminated up to 20 million acres of U.S. croplands with
the forever chemicals.
Eick
said it’s “very clear” from past studies that eating fish, which can
concentrate pollutants found in the water they swim in and in the prey they
eat, has been linked to higher PFAS levels.
Although
the evidence is not as strong as for fish and shellfish, Eick said eggs, certain kinds
of meat, especially liver
and other organ meats and dairy products have
also been found to have higher levels of longer chain PFAS in
particular. EU scientists have also warned that
fruit can contain elevated levels of PFAS.
Food
packaging, especially for take-out food, has come under a lot of scrutiny
lately as PFAS are commonly used to help grease- and water-proof containers,
bags and bakery papers. A seminal study from 2019 found that people
who on a daily basis ate microwaved popcorn, which generally comes in coated
bags, had “significantly higher” PFAS blood levels, while regularly eating fast
food and pizza also tended to be linked to higher PFAS levels. Overall, the
risk from eating processed food is not quite as clear yet as eating a
contaminated fish because the chemicals have to migrate from the packaging onto
the food, noted Eick.
The
microwaved popcorn study and others have found that some of the highest PFAS
concentrations detected in humans were PFOA and PFOS — two older generation
PFAS that are banned in Europe and have been phased out by U.S. manufacturers.
“It
is still a major problem, even though we know that they have been phased out”
said Eick, who conducted a study that found elevated levels of those
and other older PFAS in pregnant people who ate fish and other animal products.
PFAS
in organic food
The
consumer wellness site Mamavation has been testing a range of consumer products
for fluorine, an indicator for PFAS, at an Environmental Protection
Agency-certified lab. Leah Segedie, founder of Mamavation, told EHN that she
has focused the testing on organic food and products marketed as green or
natural, given that people buy those products in part because they think
they’re safer.
Recently
published testing from Mamavation found that four out of 55 organic pasta
sauces tested last year had fluorine, while five out of 17 canola oils, and
four out of 33 nut butters had the PFAS indicator. Subsequent testing of a
smaller number of sauces and oils this year did not turn up any evidence of the
compounds.
EHN.org
partially funded the testing. Pete Myers, chief scientist of Environmental
Health Sciences, which publishes Environmental Health News, reviewed the
findings.
Linda
Birnbaum, former director at the National Institute of Environmental Health
Sciences and the National Toxicology Program and a scholar in residence at the
Nicholas School of the Environment at Duke University, told Mamavation that
while “the good news is that only 8% of the tomato and pasta sauces (tested)
did not have any PFAS,” there would ideally be no PFAS in our food as the
compounds can be toxic at low doses.
Michigan
State University’s Carignan said that her initial thoughts on the Mamavation
pasta sauce testing were that the results could be false positives, as there’s
a number of challenges with testing for PFAS in food. But she added that
researchers know that produce with higher water content, like tomatoes, can
absorb more of the compounds, so “it’s possible that the results are real.”
Limitations
in the FDA’s testing of PFAS in food
The
FDA’s effort to test for PFAS in food highlights
some of the testing challenges. In 2019, the agency developed a new method to
test for 16 out of the estimated 9,000+ PFAS in a
range of common foods. The agency initially found the compounds in 14 out of 91
samples — including shockingly high levels in a piece of chocolate cake.
The
FDA later took back those results, saying that it appeared that and the other
result for chocolate milk were false positives as the test couldn’t distinguish
between the compound PFPeA and chocolate. The agency also raised its detection
limit, saying that there were only two foods that it could confidently say had
PFAS. The FDA has said that the sample size in this study was too small to draw
conclusions from.
Some
environmental health researchers and advocates have raised concerns about the
FDA’s testing efforts to date. The agency should test for the specific PFAS
found in food packaging, not just those found in the environment, Melanie
Benesh, an attorney with the Environmental Working Group, told EHN.
Additionally,
the FDA should reconsider its current detection limit, given that PFAS can be
harmful in very low amounts, she added. “We really think that they should be,
at a minimum, disclosing all of their detection so that we have a fuller
picture of exactly how many foods are testing positive for some level of PFAS,
even if it's at low levels.”
Overall,
there’s an “absence of validated methods” to test for PFAS in food, according to Charles Neslund, scientific
officer for Eurofins USA, a leading PFAS testing lab, although researchers are
working to address this. The FDA, for example, is expanding its method to
test for four additional PFAS. Scientists are also working to improve methods
to test for fluorine in food packaging to
quickly screen for the presence of PFAS.
An
emerging challenge is that limited methods exist to test for PFAS “precursors”
— that is, compounds that break down in the environment or in our bodies into
PFAS.
Steps
to reduce health harms of PFAS in food
So
far seven states —
California, Maine, Connecticut, New York, Vermont, Minnesota and Washington —
are following Denmark in
banning PFAS from food packaging, with the soonest of these bans going into
effect in New York at the end of this year. In the meantime, a new certification tracks whether
single-use food containers have PFAS, BPA and other toxics.
In
addition, a growing number of restaurants and fast food chains have started to
ban PFAS from food packaging. Burger King, Chipotle, Taco Bell, Wendy’s,
McDonald’, Sweetgreen and other chains have
already banned or will soon eliminate food waste from packaging —
although recent testing from Consumer
Reports found that many companies with bans already in place
still have the compounds in their packaging.
Keith
Vorst, an associate professor of food science at Iowa State University, told
EHN that challenges remain in completely eliminating PFAS from food packaging,
including a lack of safe and inexpensive grease proofing alternatives.
Additionally, makers of recycled-plastic food containers are finding trace
amounts of PFAS in their products even when the compounds are not added as a
coating.
If
PFAS in food packaging bans move forward, there will need to be a consensus on
what counts as intentionally added PFAS versus background contamination, he
added. “I haven’t heard a single one of the companies I work with say ‘there’s
a future for fluorochemistry in our products.’ ”
In
general, environmental health experts would like to see federal U.S. regulatory
agencies cooperate to better address PFAS exposure research and issue
appropriate health warnings. The EPA could, for example, conduct further
testing of the sludge generated at wastewater treatment plants and crop fields
where it was spread, said Benesh. “The extent to which food is being
contaminated with sludge is, I think, dramatically underestimated, and the more
we test, the more we're going to realize how big of a problem this is,” Benesh
said.
Michigan
now requires businesses, like paper mills and chemical companies, that create
wastewater that’s especially high in PFAS to pre-treat that waste before
it goes to public treatment plants.
There
are some simple measures that pregnant people and anyone concerned about PFAS
exposure can take, such as cutting down how much fish and other animal products
they consume, Eick said. She also suggests tossing out any nonstick pans with
scratches on them and using the Environmental Working Group’s Skin Deep
database to make sure your personal care products are low-risk. Despite the
widespread prevalence of PFAS, “I do really feel like it is possible to
minimize exposure,” Eick added.