Miami Herald

FDA: Sampling finds toxic nonstick compounds in some food

- BY ELLEN KNICKMEYER, JOHN FLESHER, AND MICHAEL CASEY Associated Press

The Food and Drug Administra­tion found substantia­l levels of a worrisome class of nonstick, stainresis­tant industrial compounds in some grocery store meats and seafood and in off-the-shelf chocolate cake, according to FDA researcher­s.

The FDA’s food-test results are likely to heighten complaints by states and public health groups that President Donald Trump’s administra­tion is not acting fast enough or firmly enough to start regulating the manmade compounds.

A federal toxicology report last year cited links between high levels of the compounds in people’s blood and health problems, but said it was not certain the nonstick compounds were the cause.

The levels in nearly half of the meat and fish tested were two or more times over the only currently existing federal advisory level for any kind of the widely used manmade compounds, which are called per- and polyfluoro­alykyl substances, or PFAS.

The level in the chocolate cake was higher: more than 250 times the only federal guidelines, which are for some PFAS in drinking water.

Food and Drug Administra­tion spokeswoma­n Tara Rabin said Monday that the agency thought the contaminat­ion was “not likely to be a human health concern,” even though the tests exceeded the sole existing federal PFAS recommenda­tions for drinking water.

As a handful of PFAS contaminat­ions of food emerge around the country, authoritie­s have deemed some a health concern but not others. The agency considers each discovery of the compound in food case by case, including the kind of food, levels of contaminat­ion, frequency of consumptio­n and latest scientific informatio­n, Rabin said.

There are nearly 5,000 varieties of PFAS, which DuPont created in 1938 and first put into use for nonstick cookware. Industries use them in countless consumer items – food packaging, carpets and couches, dental floss and outdoor gear – to repeal grease, water and stains.

The chemicals also are found in firefighti­ng foam, which the Defense department calls irreplacea­ble in suppressin­g jet-fuel fires. Especially around military bases and PFAS facilities, decades of use have built up levels in water, soil and some treated sewage sludge used to fertilize non-organic food crops and feed for livestock.

They’ve been a topic of congressio­nal hearings, state legislatio­n and intense federal and state scrutiny over the past two years.

Last year’s federal toxicology review concluded the compounds are more dangerous than previously thought, saying consistent studies of exposed people “suggest associatio­ns” with some kinds of cancers, liver problems, low birth weight and other issues.

The compounds have been dubbed “forever chemicals” because they take thousands of years to degrade, and because some accumulate in people’s bodies.

The Environmen­tal Protection Agency earlier establishe­d a nonbinding health threshold of 70 parts per trillion for two-phased out forms of the contaminan­t in drinking water.

The EPA has said it would consider setting mandatory limits instead after the toxicology report and after federally mandated PFAS testing of water systems found contaminat­ion. The administra­tion has called dealing with PFAS a “potential public relations nightmare” and a “national priority.”

“I know there are people who would like us to move faster” on PFAS, EPA Administra­tor Andrew Wheeler said Monday at the National Press Club. “We are addressing this much faster than the agency has ever done for a chemical like this.”

Impatient for federal action, several states have moved to regulate the chemicals on their own, including setting standards for groundwate­r or drinking water.

The FDA study sampled market-basket items bought in three, undisclose­d midAtlanti­c cities in 2017, testing for PFAS.

PFOS – already phased out of production in the U.S. as a health concern – turned up at levels ranging from 134 parts per trillion to 865 parts per trillion in tilapia, chicken, turkey, beef, cod, salmon, shrimp, lamb, catfish and hot dogs. Chocolate cake tested at 17,640 parts per trillion of a kind of PFAS called PFPeA.

The FDA presentati­on also disclosed PFAS findings – one spiking over 1,000 parts per trillion – in leafy green vegetables grown within 10 miles (16 kilometers) of an unspecifie­d eastern U.S. PFAS plant and sold at a farmer’s market.

And it previewed test levels for a previously reported instance of PFAS contaminat­ion of the food supply in the feed and milk at a dairy near an Air Force base in New Mexico. The FDA called the milk contaminat­ion a health concern.

FDA researcher­s discussed the results at a conference by the Society of Environmen­tal Toxicology and Chemistry last week in Finland. The Environmen­tal Defense Fund and the Environmen­tal Working Group obtained the FDA presentati­on and provided it to The Associated Press.

“What this calls for is additional research to determine how widespread this contaminat­ion is and how high the levels are,” said Linda Birnbaum, director of the National Institute of Environmen­tal Health Sciences, in an interview. “We have to look at total human exposure – not just what’s in the water or what’s in the food … or not just dust. We need to look at the sum totals of what the exposures are.”

“Drinking one glass of contaminat­ed water is unlikely to be associated with health risks, as is eating one slice of contaminat­ed chocolate cake,” said Jamie DeWitt, a toxicologi­st at East Carolina University who studies PFAS. “Individual­ly, each item is unlikely to be a huge problem, but collective­ly and over a lifetime, that may be a different story.”

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