2018
DOI: 10.1111/bcpt.13125
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CLARITY‐BPA academic laboratory studies identify consistent low‐dose Bisphenol A effects on multiple organ systems

Abstract: Bisphenol A (BPA) is a high-production chemical used in a variety of applications worldwide. While BPA has been documented as an endocrine-disrupting chemical (EDC) having adverse health-related outcomes in multiple studies, risk assessment for BPA has lagged due to reliance on guideline toxicology studies over academic ones with end-points considered more sensitive and appropriate. To address current controversies on BPA safety, the United States National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS), th… Show more

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Cited by 86 publications
(54 citation statements)
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References 132 publications
(283 reference statements)
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“…Regarding the low‐dose issue, Dr. Delclos' conclusion is based on the assumption by FDA toxicologists that if an effect of BPA is found at a low dose within the range of human exposure, but the same effect is not found to consistently increase or decrease across a 10,000‐fold dose range, then the toxicological maxim “the dose makes the poison” has not been confirmed and the statistically significant low‐dose results can be declared of no biological significance. Specifically, a number of adverse effects were seen in the lowest (2.5 µg/kg/day) dose group in the FDA's guideline portion of CLARITY‐BPA, consistent with effects observed in a number of the studies conducted by the academic investigators; reviewed in Prins et al The FDA ignored their core‐experiment findings concerning mammary adenoma/adenocarcinoma, uterine stromal polyps, plus significant increases in prostatic inflammatory disease at low doses of BPA. These findings should not be ignored, nor should related findings of low‐dose effects in studies conducted by the academic investigators.…”
Section: Flaws In Interpretation Of Clarity‐bpasupporting
confidence: 61%
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“…Regarding the low‐dose issue, Dr. Delclos' conclusion is based on the assumption by FDA toxicologists that if an effect of BPA is found at a low dose within the range of human exposure, but the same effect is not found to consistently increase or decrease across a 10,000‐fold dose range, then the toxicological maxim “the dose makes the poison” has not been confirmed and the statistically significant low‐dose results can be declared of no biological significance. Specifically, a number of adverse effects were seen in the lowest (2.5 µg/kg/day) dose group in the FDA's guideline portion of CLARITY‐BPA, consistent with effects observed in a number of the studies conducted by the academic investigators; reviewed in Prins et al The FDA ignored their core‐experiment findings concerning mammary adenoma/adenocarcinoma, uterine stromal polyps, plus significant increases in prostatic inflammatory disease at low doses of BPA. These findings should not be ignored, nor should related findings of low‐dose effects in studies conducted by the academic investigators.…”
Section: Flaws In Interpretation Of Clarity‐bpasupporting
confidence: 61%
“…The FDA has not been willing to acknowledge the importance of these low‐dose findings to the public health . Other publications reviewing the low‐dose CLARITY‐BPA findings by the academic investigators, together with the FDA core guideline study results, discuss the implications of these findings for BPA risk assessments in more detail . However, given the design and execution flaws in CLARITY‐BPA, it is not surprising that some prior findings from studies by academic investigators, that had been conducted with appropriate animal models sensitive to environmental oestrogens, with different exposure methods and with appropriate negative controls, were not replicated in CLARITY‐BPA.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The CLARITY‐BPA project in the United States brought together regulatory (Food and Drug Administration) and academic scientists to assess developmental and life‐time BPA exposures in rats treated at a common facility and consistent study design across a range of tissue end‐points and organ systems. However, discrepant results, weaknesses of the study protocol and disagreement on interpretation of the results make this effort a questionable success . Although this nascent collaboration may still lead to better co‐ordination between academic and agency research, a remaining issue is the focus.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%