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Overview
During the week of April 14, 2008, upon the request of the Commissioner of
Food and Drugs, FDA formed an agency-wide BPA (Bisphenol A) task force to facilitate
cross-agency review of current research and new information on BPA for all
FDA regulated products. As a result of this review, the task force will make
recommendations to the Commissioner regarding next steps.
As part of the evaluation, the FDA Task Force is reviewing the concerns presented
in the National Toxicology Program (NTP) Draft Brief published on April 14,
2008 by the U.S. National Institutes of Health. We also are reviewing the
concerns presented in the Canadian draft risk assessment released in April
2008 and are coordinating closely with Health Canada and the Canadian Ministry
of the Environment and Minister of Health.
FDA has been reviewing the emerging literature on BPA on a continuous basis. For
example, FDA has recently completed a review of the available biological fate
data and two recently completed rodent multigeneration reproductive studies;
these studies did not indicate a safety concern for BPA at current exposure levels. In
addition, FDA is conducting a review of the data on neural and behavioral effects
of BPA exposure.
Based on our ongoing review, we believe there is a large body of evidence
that indicates that FDA-regulated products containing BPA currently on the
market are safe and that exposure levels to BPA from food contact materials,
including for infants and children, are below those that may cause health effects. However,
we will continue to consider new research and information as they become available.
This position is consistent with two risk assessments for BPA conducted by
the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) Scientific Panel on Food Additives,
Flavourings, Processing Aids and Materials in Contact with Food and the Japanese
National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology. Each
of these documents considered the question of a possible low-dose effect and
concluded that no current health risk exists for BPA at the current exposure
level.
Message for Consumers
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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