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NIEHS News
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NTP Draft Brief on DEHP
Questions about the safety of the plasticizer di(2-ethylhexyl) phthalate (DEHP), particularly in regards to exposure during medical procedures such as transfusions, have swirled for decades, but especially in the last several years, given growing concerns about endocrine disruption. In October 2005, an independent panel of experts convened by the National Toxicology Program Center for the Evaluation of Risks to Human Reproduction (NTP-CERHR) sought to take stock of what is known and identify critical research needs regarding human exposure to DEHP, in particular its potential reproductive and developmental toxicity. Now that the independent experts have had their say, the NTP is weighing in with its interpretation.
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Harming while healing? Concerns about potential reproductive effects of exposure to the plasticizer DEHP, including those to infants from uses in medical tubing and other equipment, prompted a new examination of the available health data by the NTP.
image: Jacqueline Hunkele/iStockphoto
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Based on the expert panel's report, comments from stakeholders and peer reviewers, and new information published since the experts' meeting, the NTP released a draft brief in May 2006 about DEHP exposure and toxicity. With peer review completed in late August, the brief is now being finalized and will be added to the forthcoming NTP-CERHR monograph The Potential Human Reproductive and Developmental Effects of DEHP.
This monograph will comprise the CERHR expert panel report, a list of the panel experts, all public comments made about the report, and the NTP brief on DEHP. Although the brief summarizes what the expert report says, it is more than just an executive summaryÑit represents the NTP's view of the various public and peer-review comments and additional research studies received since the report was prepared.
The 2005 expert panel meeting marks the first time the CERHR has had a compound re-evaluated; a previous evaluation was published in 2000. The need for another just five years later underscores the intensity with which DEHP is being investigated.
"[Assessing] DEHP again shows that the CERHR process is evergreen," says Paul Foster, deputy director of the NTP-CERHR. "This is the first time that CERHR has gone back and said there's now been a significant amount of water that's gone under the bridge, and we should go back and re-evaluate to see whether or not any of our original conclusions have changed."
According to Foster, the brief distills the intricate and detailed scientific knowledge of the monograph into information that educated laypeople can use to put concerns about the potential for DEHP toxicity into perspective.
Hard Science on a Softener
DEHP is an oily chemical that confers flexibility to rigid polyvinyl chloride plastic. DEHP-softened plastic appears in numerous products, including building materials, food packaging, and medical devices. Because DEHP does not form tight chemical bonds with the plastic, some amount can leach out, and the compound has been detected in packaged foods, indoor air, household dust, and various substances and paraphernalia associated with medical treatment (such as bagged blood and tubing).
DEHP has induced reproductive and developmental problems in male rodents, but there are scant and uncertain data for effects in humans. It is known, however, that low-level human exposure is widespread and that certain populations are more highly exposed. For example, according to the draft brief, newborns and infants undergoing particular medical procedures may have 100 to 1,000 times the exposure experienced by the general population.
Because animal studies indicate that the developing male reproductive system is especially vulnerable to adverse DEHP-associated effects, the expert panel, in its 2005 report, attached "serious concern" to critically ill male newborns and infants receiving prolonged medical treatment. The NTP concurred in its draft brief and also agreed that concern is warranted for male infants younger than 1 year and for the sons of women who underwent certain medical procedures while pregnant. Less concern was attached to low-level exposures in utero or after the first year of life, and there was minimal concern for adverse effects from typical background exposures.
Fairness and Balance
The draft brief is generally deemed fair by both scientists and stakeholders. "To me, it seemed to be very fair based on the discussions and deliberations at the expert review committee," says Foster. The American Chemistry Council's Phthalate Esters Panel considered both the brief and the expert panel's report "fair, but very conservative," says Marian Stanley, the panel's senior director. "We're certainly pleased to see that the areas of concern have been lowered [from the 2000 report] for a couple of cases [children older than a year and pregnant or lactating women]. We think that's justified."
The Phthalate Esters Panel disagrees, however, with the NTP's level of concern about DEHP exposure among newborns and infants. "DEHP medical devices have been used for better than fifty years, and there hasn't been any verified evidence of harm to humans. We don't believe that there needs to be as much concern for critically ill neonates because, as the FDA has said [in a July 2002 Public Health Notification], the treatment outweighs any risks from exposure to DEHP," says Stanley.
Health Care Without Harm (HCWH), a coalition of health and environmental groups that, among other issues, advocates replacing DEHP-containing medical devices with alternatives, was satisfied with the NTP's position. "We don't have any quibbles with [who was determined to be] medically exposed, because the panel has expressed serious concern about that and we agree with that," says Ted Schettler, science director of the Science and Environmental Health Network, on behalf of HCWH.
Schettler avoids defining a level of concern for DEHP exposure of pregnant and lactating women: "We remain concerned about that group of women. Whether we want to say it's some concern or more than that, we think it should be emphasized that in the general population, pregnant and lactating women are exposed not only to DEHP but also to other phthalates that work through a common toxicological mechanism. The committee wasn't charged with addressing aggregate exposures to multiple phthalates, but that's the real world."
Outstanding Questions
The question of aggregate exposures is, of course, a scientific dilemma facing the risk assessment community at large, not just the CERHR. Still, says Foster, "I think one of our weaknesses is that we do these evaluations based on single chemicals. I think what's emerging from a lot of the exposure information that's being published, mainly from the CDC but also from others in Europe, is that the population at large is exposed to multiple phthalates. We have not really devised an appropriate method yet for how we handle that and put it into a risk context." He adds that the CERHR system will need to be adapted as new, appropriate methodologies become available.
Another notable challenge is extrapolating results from animal studies to human health. "I think we're going to continue seeing much more research trying to tease out and figure out if the effects we see in rodents are relevant to humans. This isn't cut-and-dried research," says Stanley.
Research with nonhuman primates hasn't proven any simpler and represents one of the more contentious reactions to the brief. According to Schettler, there's disagreement about whether nonhuman primates, specifically marmosets, are less vulnerable to DEHP than rodents, as suggested by research published in the October 2005 issue of Birth Defects Research B: Developmental and Reproductive Toxicology. Industry-sponsored research indicates that marmosets are a good study model for predicting toxicity in humans, but the October 2005 study, published just as the expert panel meeting concluded, questions that belief, and the debate has not yet been satisfactorily resolved.
Also unresolved are questions about the metabolism of DEHP and its mechanisms of toxicity. The limited epidemiologic data reviewed in the draft brief raise questions that cannot be answered yet. Research is ongoing in all areas, however. "The science is still moving forward; the science is still being created," says Stanley. "As new techniques become available, there at some point is going to come where science suddenly takes a quantum leap and we can start understanding a lot more."
Julia R. Barrett
Beyond the Bench
A Two-Way Street: Building Lasting Community Connections
It is human nature to remain committed to endeavors in which one feels personally invested. For the parents and children involved in studies at the Mount Sinai Center for Children's Environmental Health and Disease Prevention Research, most of whom are from low-income, minority communities such as East Harlem and the Bronx, this sense of commitment plays an important role in their continued participation in such studies. The center's Community Outreach and Translation Core (COTC) encourages this community kinship by partnering with community organizations to create workshops and educational activities that help keep children and their parents engaged in the studies.
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Getting down and dirty with the environment. A program of the Mount Sinai Center for Children's Environmental Health and Disease Prevention Research and the New York City Parks Foundation engages children in activities that teach them the relevance of the environmentÑand environmental researchÑto their health.
image: Reeve Chace, Nathaly Filion
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According to COTC director Luz Claudio, the COTC staff have designed activities that pick up where organized educational activities at school leave off, encouraging children to learn new, useful information they can share with their parents. The activities are also culturally relevant and easy to take advantage, which makes it easy to keep them going.
Claudio says one main goal of these programs is to expose the study participants to realistic, positive role models in the medical profession to encourage their interest in future medical careers. Another is to remind study participants that, through their participation in center studies, they are part of a national effort to improve and protect children's health. "The COTC educational activities provide direct benefits to the participants that go beyond their participation as study subjects providing data," says Claudio. "They are truly our partners in the scientific endeavor."
In one current collaborative project popular with kids and parents alike, COTC staff have joined with the nonprofit City Parks Foundation to produce educational workshops aimed at increasing study participants' physical activity. Claudio points to a study published in the September 2006 issue of the American Journal of Public Health showing that low-income and minority neighborhoods have far fewer commercial physical activityrelated facilities available. "This makes our workshops all the more important for these communities because there are few gyms or other sports facilities that are accessible to them," she says.
The workshops offered through the City Parks Foundation collaboration introduce the wonders of the outdoors to children who might not have spent much time there. Workshops include "Trees, Leaves and Worms" (observing nature in action), "My Nature Journal" (recording those observations), and ice-skating excursions in Central Park. "We want parents to learn that they can use New York City parks as learning resources that also provide free health benefits. Parents who become excited by the experiences are more likely to integrate these types of excursions into their children's lives," says Claudia DeMegret, director of education at the City Parks Foundation.
Other collaborations include family mini-golf with the Randall's Island Sports Foundation, a "Mad Hot Dancing!" class with salsa dancer Rodney Lopez (featured in the movie Mad Hot Ballroom), and a "Yummy Good" cooking class in partnership with the community organization Little Sisters of the Assumption. The center also distributes regular newsletters and fact sheets telling families where the program's outdoor activities are conducted.
Other workshops are designed specifically to demystify the scientific process and reinforce to the study participants how integral they are to the program. Kids can look at their own cells under a microscope in the "Your Body, Your Cells" workshop. They and their parents also learn to distinguish reliable and unreliable sources of health information on the web in the "On-line for Health" workshop. Scavenger hunts afford the children the opportunity to learn about different kinds of plastics and their varying levels of safety ("Plastics and More Plastics"), and they are also introduced to genetics and heredity ("Do These Genes Make Me Look Fat, and Other Things Genes Do").
Parents appreciate the diversity of entertaining learning opportunities offered to the children through the programs, and note how the kids connect these experiences to their role in the center's research projects. One parent (who is unidentified to protect the privacy of the study participant) observes, "They enjoy playing in the grass, being in the dirt, collecting leaves. . . . [After an event] they remember and talk about some of the things they did. I think the more they're exposed to things, the more interested they become in the study."
Tanya Tillett
Headliners: Respiratory Health
NIEHS-Supported Research
image: Losevsky Pavel/Shutterstock
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Effects in Infants from Tobacco Smoke, Mold, and Older Siblings
Biagini JM, LeMasters GK, Ryan PH, Levin L, Reponen T, Bernstein DI, et al. 2006. Environmental risk factors of rhinitis in early infancy. Pediatr Allergy Immunol 17(4):278284.
Many environmental exposures have been confirmed to affect children's respiratory health, but few have been studied in very young children. Now NIEHS grantees Grace K. LeMasters, Jocelyn M. Biagini, and their colleagues at the University of Cincinnati and the Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center demonstrate for the first time the relationship between exposure to environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) and allergy in infants.
About one-fifth of all American adults smoke cigarettes, resulting in about 43% of children being exposed to ETS at home. ETS exposure, along with mold exposure, has been documented as a risk factor for health problems such as wheezing, asthma, and otitis media in both children and adults.
In the current study, the researchers observed the effects of ETS and indoor mold exposure on the development of rhinitis and symptoms such as nasal blockage, sneezing, and nasal itching in a cohort of 633 infants under the age of 1 enrolled in the Cincinnati Childhood Allergen and Air Pollution Study. They used interviewer-administered questionnaires to collect demographics and information on smoking habits, family health history, and other covariates. They also analyzed any upper respiratory symptoms of the infants recorded by the parents in a monthly diary. In addition, they performed a skin-prick test on the parents and the infants (at approximately 12 months of age) to test for sensitivity to at least 1 of 15 airborne allergens.
The investigators found that exposure to ETS increased an infant's risk of developing allergic rhinitis by almost threefold. They also found that exposure to mold in the home was associated with increased risk of upper respiratory infections but not allergy, which differed from previously reported research in older children and adults.
Other findings included a protective effect of having older siblings in the home. Infants with at least one older sibling were less likely to have allergic rhinitis by their first birthday. This finding supports the hygiene hypothesis, a theory that exposure to infectious agents early in life may decrease the risk for allergic diseases such as asthma later in life. Presumably, by having older siblings these infants were exposed to a wider variety of viruses and bacteria, causing their immune systems to develop in a way that decreased the risk of allergy.
The authors conclude that further research is necessary to confirm their results. Continued research is also needed to determine the components of cigarette smoke that cause these health effects, and to ascertain the role of possible geneenvironment interactions.
Jerry Phelps
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