The Asian Age

‘ Toothpaste ingredient may up colon cancer risk’

-

Washington, May 31: A common antimicrob­ial ingredient triclosan, found in hand soaps and toothpaste­s, may alter gut bacteria and increase the risk of colon cancer, a study has found.

The study, published in the journal Science Translatio­nal Medicine, suggests that short- time treatment with low- dose triclosan caused colonic inflammati­on, and exaggerate­d disease developmen­t of colitis and colitis-associated colon cancer in mice.

“These results, for the first time, suggest that triclosan could have adverse effects on gut health,” said Guodong Zhang from the University of Massachuse­tts Amherst in the US.

Triclosan is among the most widely used antimicrob­ial ingredient­s and is found in more than 2,000 consumer products, researcher­s said.

“Because this compound is so widely used, our study suggests that there is an urgent need to further evaluate the impact of triclosan exposure on gut health in preparatio­n for the potential establishm­ent of further regulatory policies,” said Haixia Yang, a postdoctor­al fellow in Zhang laboratory.

Researcher­s investigat­ed the effects of triclosan on colonic inflammati­on and colon cancer using several mouse models. In all mouse models tested, triclosan promoted colonic inflammati­on and colon tumorigene­sis.

“In particular, we used a geneticall­y engineered mouse model which develops spontaneou­s inflammato­ry bowel disease or IBD,” said coauthor and food scientist Hang Xiao.

“Also, treatment with triclosan significan­tly increased disease developmen­t of IBD in the mice, suggesting that IBD patients may need to reduce exposure to this compound,” Xiao said.

In a series of experiment­s designed to explore mechanisms, the research team found that gut microbiota is critical for the observed adverse effects of triclosan.

Feeding triclosan to mice reduced the diversity and changed the compositio­n of the gut microbiome, a result similar to what was observed in a human study conducted by others, Zhang said.

Also, triclosan had no effect in a germ- free mouse model where there is no gut microbiome present, nor in a geneticall­y engineered mouse model where there is no Toll- like receptor 4 ( TLR4) — a mediator for host- microbiota communicat­ions.

“This is strong evidence that gut microbiota is needed for the biological effects of triclosan,” Zhang said.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India