
Bisphenol A Safe, Says FDA
FDA Issues Draft Report on Bisphenol A Noting
"Adequate Margin of Safety" in Typical Exposure From
Food
By Miranda Hitti
WebMD Health News
Reviewed by Louise Chang, MD
Source of Article: http://www.webmd.com/parenting/news/20080815/bisphenol-a-safe-says-fda
Aug.
15, 2008 -- Bisphenol A, the controversial plastic
chemical, is safe at typical exposure levels from food and drink, according to
an FDA draft report.
Bisphenol A, also called BPA, is found in polycarbonate
plastic, including some water bottles and baby bottles, and in epoxy resins,
which are used to line metal products including canned foods.
The draft report states that based on lab tests in rodents, infants and
adults are exposed to bisphenol A levels
that are below toxic levels. "Safe or safety means that there is
reasonable certainty in the minds of competent scientists that the substance is
not harmful under the intended conditions of use," but "complete
certainty of absolute harmlessness is scientifically impossible to
establish," the draft report states.
Bisphenol A safety became a hot topic in April,
when U.S. government scientists at the National Toxicology Program (NTP)
expressed "some" concern about bisphenol
A's possible effects on the mammary gland, prostate gland, and accelerated
female puberty.
Since
then, there's been a storm of bisphenol A publicity,
with major retailers including Wal-Mart
backing away from baby bottles containing bisphenol
A, the FDA probing bisphenol A safety, and consumers
wondering how concerned they should be.
"It's
become a bit of a media spectacle," says Sarah Vogel, PhD, MPH, whose
That
spectacle hasn't let up. Today's FDA draft report, which
doesn't recommend banning bisphenol A, is the latest
development. But
But
will those reports settle the bisphenol A safety debate? Or have the questions lodged in the public
consciousness, with opinion outpacing official guidance? And when all is said
and done, will you ever look at your water bottles, baby bottles, and canned
foods the same way?
It
depends whom you ask, with three very different viewpoints vying for your
favor.
View No.1: No Need to Worry
This is
the stance that the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) took in late July --
and it's in line with today's FDA draft report.
An EFSA
panel reviewed bisphenol A
research -- mostly done on rodents -- and concluded that bisphenol
A passes through the human body much faster than in rodents, with little chance
for harm to human fetuses or newborns.
That
finding "supports FDA's position that data we have reviewed up until this
time support the safety of the currently permitted uses of BPA in food contact
material," FDA spokesman Sebastian Cianci told
WebMD by email last week, before the draft report was issued. Like the
European report, the FDA's draft report argues that studying bisphenol A's effects in rodents may
"overestimate" bisphenol A's effects
in humans.
The
American Chemistry Council, a plastics industry trade group, praises the FDA's
conclusion. In a news release, the council says the FDA's draft report "strongly
reaffirms" the safety of bisphenol A and
calls the draft report "the most up-to-date analysis on the safety of bisphenol A in the world."
Steven Hentges, PhD, of the American Chemistry Council's
Polycarbonate/BPA Global Group, told WebMD last week that consumers and
companies that ditched bisphenol A made those
decisions "very quickly, without having complete and final
information."
Hentges says the studies that touched off
concern "really aren't very robust." He also sees a
"language" issue dating back to the NTP's
draft report.
"The
NTP language was 'some concern' and people tended to focus on the word
'concern' without realizing or really thinking through that there's a qualifier
up front: 'some,'" says Hentges.
View No. 2: Cause for Concern
People
with concerns about bisphenol A
-- including some scientists studying bisphenol A --
see no proof that bisphenol A is harmless in humans.
Vogel,
who will start a fellowship at the nonprofit Chemical Heritage Foundation in
Earlier
this week, Vogel told WebMD she expected the FDA would, "at a
minimum, would decide to reduce the reference dose," which is the
acceptable amount of bisphenol A
exposure in everyday life. That didn't happen; the FDA's draft report doesn't
mention changing the reference dose.
Vogel
wasn't immediately available to comment on the FDA's draft report. The
nonprofit Environmental Working Group -- which Vogel doesn't work for -- issued
a news release criticizing the FDA's draft report. "We have long since
lost faith in FDA's ability to be an impartial authority on FDA's safety. Time
and again, FDA has sided with special interests instead of the public
interest on this chemical," Renee Sharp, a senior analyst with the
Environmental Working Group, says in the news release.
Almost
93% of Americans have detectable levels of bisphenol
A in their urine, Vogel observes, citing CDC data on urine samples provided by
some 2,500 Americans aged 6 and older for a national health survey in
2003-2004.
Those
CDC figures don't connect bisphenol A to health
effects. But the data, along with bisphenol A research on animals, "doesn't make me feel
great," Vogel says. She'd like to see stricter safety standards and more
research in people, as long as research doesn't become a stalling tactic.
"If it's a way to delay any decision on BPA, it's really frustrating,"
says Vogel.
Hentges counters that "with bisphenol A, we already know so
much about it ... it's not likely that anyone's going to do an experiment
tomorrow that will render everything that we know today wrong."
View No. 3: The Precautionary
Approach
Canadian
health officials took what they called a "prudent" approach in April,
when they proposed banning bisphenol A in baby
bottles, although their risk assessment didn't find proof of danger.
"
Hentges stresses the fact that the Canadian
proposal isn't law yet and isn't based on science. "If you dig into the
details of the science, you find that they're really quite similar --
Meanwhile,
Vogel says the bisphenol A
issue goes beyond baby bottles and water bottles. She's concerned about bisphenol A in the environment, workers who handle bisphenol A, and the government's chemical safety standards
and risk assessment process.
"These
are really big issues," says Vogel. She sees a larger tug of war between
people's desire to "do what's right" and to be reassured that
"everything is fine."
What to
do in the meantime? Here's what the FDA told consumers in April, when the media
frenzy began. It's advice that focuses only on baby bottles, not other sources
of bisphenol A.
"At
this time, FDA is not recommending that anyone discontinue using products that
contain BPA while we continue our risk-assessment process. However, concerned
consumers should know that several alternatives to polycarbonate baby bottles
exist, including glass baby bottles."
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