2008年10月29日 星期三

BPA Ruling Flawed, Panel Says

BPA可用於製造高分子材料如PVC聚氯乙烯環氧樹脂聚碳酸酯時用雙酚A(酚甲烷)。防氧化令化學成份結合

[編輯] 對環境生物和人類的影響

BPA酚甲烷為一種內分泌干擾素,會影響生殖系統。在清潔聚氯乙烯環氧樹脂聚碳酸酯纖維時,若使用氧化鈉氫氧化鈉(苛性鈉/哥士的)和其它清潔劑,會釋出酚甲烷。

有關酚甲烷對人類的影響,目前說法不一:工業界資助的研究結果傾向於聲稱沒有發現重大影響;政府資助的研究傾向於發現有重大影響。歐洲日本學者已密切注視它對人類生殖力的影響。美國政府衛生機構稱,動物實驗顯示,塑料瓶中通常含有的化學物質酚甲烷可能會引發癌變和其他功能紊亂。在實驗中,接觸到酚甲烷的老鼠身上出現乳腺癌前列腺癌等癌症發病徵兆。[1]

加拿大政府已於2008年10月18日發表公報宣布,被廣泛應用於食品包裝工業的酚甲烷是一種危險的化學品,並正式將酚甲烷列入有毒化學品名單,禁止在製造嬰兒奶瓶的過程中添加酚甲烷。這一舉措使加拿大成為全球首個宣布酚甲烷有害並禁止其用於食品包裝業的國家。[2]

BPA Ruling Flawed, Panel Says

FDA Ignored Scientific Evidence of Harm, Report Finds


Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, October 29, 2008; Page A13

The Food and Drug Administration ignored scientific evidence and used flawed methods when it determined that a chemical widely used in baby bottles and in the lining of cans is not harmful, a scientific advisory panel has found.

In a highly critical report to be released today, the panel of scientists from government and academia said the FDA did not take into consideration scores of studies that have linked bisphenol A (BPA) to prostate cancer, diabetes and other health problems in animals when it completed a draft risk assessment of the chemical last month. The panel said the FDA didn't use enough infant formula samples and didn't adequately account for variations among the samples.

Taking those studies into consideration, the panel concluded, the FDA's margin of safety is "inadequate". The panel is part of the Science Board, a committee of advisers to the FDA commissioner, and was set up to review the FDA's risk assessment of BPA.

Many of the studies that the panel said the FDA ignored were reviewed by the National Toxicology Program, which concluded in September that it had "some concern" that BPA can affect brain and behavioral development in infants and small children.


Officials at FDA, which regulates the chemical's use in plastic food containers, bottles, tableware and the plastic linings of food cans, accepted some of the criticism in the report.

"FDA agrees that due to the uncertainties raised in some studies relating to the potential effects of low doses of bisphenol-A that additional research would be valuable," said spokeswoman Judy Leon. The agency has commissioned new research on BPA.

The report adds fuel to the debate over whether to ban the use of BPA, which is used to harden plastic, particularly in baby bottles and cans of liquid formula. Infants are considered more vulnerable to the health effects of many chemicals.

"The current levels of exposure are not safe," said Sarah Janssen, a reproductive biologist with the Natural Resources Defense Council, an environmental advocacy group. "We should get rid of it in food containers."

The American Chemistry Council, a trade group that represents BPA manufacturers, said its members would comply with whatever the FDA decides to do.

"If the agency determines that existing margins of safety are insufficient in infant applications, our member companies that manufacture BPA will put processes in place to promptly phase out the use of materials containing BPA in baby bottles and infant formula packaging," ACC spokeswoman Tiffany Harrington said.

Retailers have already begun selling BPA-free baby bottles in response to consumer concerns. This month, Canada banned its use in baby bottles.

House Committee on Energy and Commerce Chairman John D. Dingell (D-Mich.) and Rep. Bart Stupak (D-Mich.), as well as several state attorneys general, have called on formula-makers to remove BPA from their products.

The report likely will be fodder for critics of FDA who have accused the agency of relying too heavily on industry-funded studies. But it is likely to put to rest charges by environmental groups and public health advocates that the panel's chairman, Martin Philbert, co-director of the University of Michigan's Risk Science Center, was influenced by grants that his center received from Dow Chemical, a major BPA manufacturer. Dow gave the center $15 million for research on dioxin.

The center also received $5 million from Charles Gelman, a retired businessman who has been vocal in his support for BPA. Philbert has said that those donations did not influence his work or the center's.

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