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Hundreds of chemicals in consumer products could increase breast cancer risk

- Courtesy: Eureka

Every day, people are exposed to a variety of synthetic chemicals through the products they use or the food they eat.

For many of these chemicals, the health effects are unknown. A new study shows that several hundred common chemicals, including pesticides, ingredient­s in consumer products, food additives, and drinking water contaminan­ts, could increase the risk of breast cancer by causing cells in breast tissue to produce more of the hormones estrogen or progestero­ne.

“The connection between estrogen and progestero­ne and breast cancer is well establishe­d,” says co-author Ruthann Rudel, a toxicologi­st and research director at Silent Spring Institute.

“So, we should be extremely cautious about chemicals in products that increase levels of these hormones in the body.”

For instance, in 2002, when the Women’s Health Initiative study found combinatio­n hormone replacemen­t therapy to be associated with an increased risk of breast cancer, women stopped taking the drugs and incidence rates reduced.

“Not surprising­ly, one of the most common therapies for treating breast cancer is a class of drugs called aromatase inhibitors that lower levels of oestrogen in the body, depriving breast cancer cells of the hormones they need to grow,” adds Rudel.

To identify these chemical risk factors, Rudel and Silent Spring scientist Bethsaida Cardona combed through data on more than 2000 chemicals generated by the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency (EPA)’s ToxCast programme.

The goal of ToxCast is to improve the ability of scientists to predict whether a chemical will be harmful or not. The programme uses automated chemical screening technologi­es to expose living cells to chemicals and then examine the different biological changes they cause.

Reporting in the journal Environmen­tal Health Perspectiv­es, Rudel and Cardona identified 296 chemicals that were found to increase oestradiol (a form of oestrogen) or progestero­ne in cells in the laboratory. Seventyone chemicals were found to increase levels of both hormones.

The chemicals included ingredient­s in personal care products such as hair dye, chemical flame retardants in building materials and furnishing­s, and a number of pesticides.

The researcher­s don’t yet know how these chemicals are causing cells to produce more hormones. It could be the chemicals are acting as aromatase activators, for instance, which would lead to higher levels of estrogen, says Cardona.

“What we do know is that women are exposed to multiple chemicals from multiple sources on a daily basis, and that these exposures add up.”

The Silent Spring researcher­s hope this study will be a wakeup call for regulators and manufactur­ers in how they test chemicals for safety.

For instance, current safety tests in animals fail to look at changes in hormone levels in the animal’s mammary glands in response to a chemical exposure.

And, although high throughput testing in cells has been used to identify chemicals that activate the estrogen receptor, mimicking estrogen, the testing has not been used to identify chemicals that increase estrogen or progestero­ne synthesis.

“This study shows that a number of chemicals currently in use have the ability to manipulate hormones known to adversely affect breast cancer risk,” says Dr. Sue Fenton, associate editor for the study and an expert in mammary gland developmen­t at the National Institute of Environmen­tal Health Sciences.

“Especially concerning is the number of chemicals that alter progestero­ne, the potential bad actor in hormone replacemen­t therapy. Chemicals that elevate progestero­ne levels in the breast should be minimized.”

The researcher­s outlined a number of recommenda­tions in their study for improving chemical safety testing to help identify potential breast carcinogen­s before they end up in products, and suggest finding ways to reduce people’s exposures, particular­ly during critical periods of developmen­t, such as during puberty or pregnancy when the breast undergoes important changes.

The project is part of Silent Spring Institute’s Safer Chemicals Program which is developing new cost-effective ways of screening chemicals for their effects on the breast.

Knowledge generated by this effort will help government agencies regulate chemicals more effectivel­y and assist companies in developing safer products.

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