Studies on
Chemical In Plastics Questioned - Congress ( USA) Examines Role Of
Industry in Regulation
Studies on Chemical In Plastics Questioned
Congress
Examines Role Of Industry in Regulation
By
Lyndsey Layton
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, April 27, 2008;
A01
Despite more than 100 published studies by government scientists
and university laboratories that have raised health concerns about
a chemical compound that is central to the multibillion-dollar
plastics industry, the
Food and Drug Administration has
deemed it safe largely because of two studies, both funded by an
industry trade group.
The agency says it has relied on research backed by the American
Plastics Council because it had input on its design, monitored its
progress and reviewed the raw data.
The compound, bisphenol A (BPA), has been linked to breast and
prostate cancer, behavioral disorders and reproductive health
problems in laboratory animals.
As evidence mounts about the risks of using BPA in baby bottles and
other products, some experts and industry critics contend that
chemical manufacturers have exerted influence over federal
regulators to keep a possibly unsafe product on the market.
Congressional Democrats have begun investigating any industry
influence in regulating BPA.
"Tobacco figured this out, and essentially it's the same model,"
said
David Michaels, who
was a federal regulator in the Clinton administration. "If you
fight the science, you're able to postpone regulation and victim
compensation, as well. As in this case, eventually the science
becomes overwhelming. But if you can get five or 10 years of
avoiding pollution control or production of chemicals, you've
greatly increased your product."
Mitchell Cheeseman, deputy director of the FDA's office of food
additive safety, said the agency is not biased toward
industry.
"The fact is, it's industry's responsibility to demonstrate the
safety of their products," he said. "The fact that industry
generated data to support the safety I don't think is an unusual
thing."
The FDA's position on the compound was called into question earlier
this month when a
National Institutes of Health
panel issued a draft report linking BPA to health concerns. Since
then, Canadian regulators have banned BPA in baby products,
and
Sen. Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.)
has introduced a bill to prohibit some uses of the compound. Ten
states, including California and Maryland, are weighing their own
restrictions.
U.S. manufacturers produce 7 billion pounds of BPA annually, and
business worldwide has been growing about 4 percent a year, driven
by rising demand in Asia. A U.S. government ban on BPA would affect
thousands of businesses and perhaps billions of dollars in profit
for its largest manufacturers.
As part of his investigation,
Rep. John D. Dingell (D-Mich.),
chairman of the
House Energy and Commerce
Committee,
wants to examine the role played by the Weinberg Group, a
Washington firm that employs scientists, lawyers and public
relations specialists to defend products from legal and regulatory
action. The firm has worked on Agent Orange, tobacco and
Teflon,
among other products linked to health hazards, and congressional
investigators say it was hired by Sunoco, a BPA manufacturer.
Dingell has asked the Weinberg Group for all records related to its
work in connection with BPA, including studies it has funded and
payments made to experts. He cited a letter written by a company
vice president in 2003 as Weinberg managed opposition in a
long-running regulatory battle over a compound in Teflon. The
strategy would be to discourage "governmental agencies, the
plaintiffs' bar and misguided environmental groups from pursuing
this matter any further," the letter said.
In a statement, Dingell said, "The tactics apparently employed by
the Weinberg Group raise serious questions about whether science is
for sale at these consulting groups, and the effect this faulty
science might have on the public health."
Matthew Weinberg, the firm's chief executive, declined to be
interviewed. But in a brief written statement, he said the company
will cooperate with Dingell's investigation.
"The analyses we conduct are rigorous and adhere to established
principles of scientific integrity," the statement said. "We
believe it is in the public interest for all scientific research to
be subject to scrutiny and the views of all affected parties to be
heard."
Scientists first flagged possible health risks of BPA more than a
decade ago. From 1997 to 2005, 116 studies of the compound were
published, many of them focused on its effects in low doses. Of
those funded by government, 90 percent showed a health effect
linked to BPA. None of the industry-funded studies found an effect;
all of them said BPA is safe.
There is a clear bias in studies funded by industry, said Michaels,
who now runs the Project on Scientific Knowledge and Public Policy
at
George Washington University and
wrote the book "Doubt is Their Product," which details how various
industries have used science to stave off regulation.
"This is a great example of the funding effect," he said. "It's not
so much because scientists are shaving the truth, but they ask
questions in a way to give them the answers they want."
Sharon Kneiss, vice president of products divisions for the
American Chemistry Council,
said in a conference call with reporters two weeks ago that
industry research is unassailable. "We make it a policy to supply
government agencies with data, and we have done it in the case of
BPA," she said. "We supplied studies following the highest levels
of quality in terms of their study. We stand behind the quality of
the studies."
The FDA and the
Environmental Protection Agency
both
regulate BPA. Because the compound is most readily absorbed through
food and drink, the FDA plays a critical regulatory role because it
approves the compound's use in plastic food containers, bottles,
tableware and the plastic linings of canned foods.
For much of the regulatory history of BPA, traditional toxicology
was used to assess risk to people -- researchers tried to find the
threshold amount above which BPA would cause cancer, malformation
or death.
Sarah Vogel, who holds a master's degree in public health and is
writing a doctoral dissertation at
Columbia University on
the politics and scientific history of BPA, said that because
practical use of the compound was at levels much lower than the
amount deemed toxic, scientists assumed it was safe. "The idea was:
Look, this stuff is at such low levels, it really couldn't effect
any harm," she said.
A decade ago, Frederick vom Saal, a reproductive scientist at
University of Missouri at Columbia, came up with a different
research strategy. He theorized that because BPA can mimic
estrogen, a female sex hormone, minuscule amounts introduced to
fetuses or infants could change cell structure and cause
significant health problems later in life. He found that doses
25,000 times below what the government has labeled as safe harmed
developing cells in mice.
In 1997, after he submitted his first study for publication in a
peer-reviewed scientific journal, vom Saal said he was visited by a
group of scientists including John M. Waechter of
Dow Chemical, a
manufacturer of BPA. According to vom Saal, Waechter began the
meeting by expressing a hope for "some mutually beneficial outcome"
if vom Saal held off on publication until a replicate study could
be performed. Vom Saal refused, and, six weeks later, sent a
pointed letter documenting the exchange to plastics industry
representatives, including Waechter, and an FDA official.
Dow declined to make Waechter available for an interview. Spokesman
Mark Walton said vom Saal misunderstood Waechter. "We categorically
reject any suggestion that what we did was in any way unethical,"
he said.
Thomas A. Clare, a lawyer with Kirkland & Ellis, representing
Dow and Waechter, said in a letter to
The Washington Post that
the "mutually beneficial outcome" to which Waechter referred was a
"meaningful exchange of scientific ideas" with vom Saal, and that
Waechter had never asked vom Saal to delay or withdraw his
research. Clare also said that Waechter met with vom Saal as a
representative of a Society of Plastics Industries task force
studying BPA and not on Dow's behalf. Clare said that the SPI task
force had already submitted vom Saal's research to the EPA before
the two men met to discuss the study.
As the country's preeminent BPA researcher, vom Saal finds that his
work is regularly attacked by the chemical industry. "We were not
prepared at all for walking into a political minefield," said vom
Saal, whose research is funded by foundations and the National
Institutes of Health.
The chemical industry, meanwhile, has funded scientists who have
served on expert review panels that advise the government about the
safety of chemical compounds.
Last year, NIH convened two panels to help it analyze BPA risks.
One panel, led by vom Saal, consisted of 38 international experts
on BPA who work for universities or governments. Last August, it
found a strong cause for health concerns, including cancer and
early puberty.
The second panel included 12 scientists, none of whom had worked on
BPA. In November, it found "some concern" about neurological
effects of the compound in children but minimal concern that it
would cause cancer or early puberty. The second group relied on
Sciences International, an Alexandria-based consulting firm, to
choose and summarize research for panel members.
The government later learned that Sciences International had done
work for Dow and BASF, two BPA manufacturers. After inquiries
by
Rep. Henry A. Waxman (D-Calif.)
and
Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.),
the government canceled its contract with the firm and audited its
work. The panel reported "minimal" concern about the compound's
impact on reproduction and development while saying it had "some
concern" about effects on neurological development.
On April 15, the National Toxicology Program, part of NIH, issued a
draft report acknowledging "some concern" about the risk of cancer,
diabetes and other serious health problems in adults. The new
report considered dozens of studies that the earlier panel had
rejected and reviewed more than 400 studies published between April
2007 and February.
"That was the big change -- a decision was made to consider
different sorts of studies in the evaluation," said Michaels, the
former federal regulator.
In response to recent findings and media reports, Cheeseman said
that FDA Commissioner Andrew C. von Eschenbach has created an
agency task force to examine BPA but that the agency maintains it
is "absolutely safe" for use in food and medical products.
Vom Saal said a flood of recent BPA studies have validated his
work. "The scientific community basically said, 'This argument is
over,' " he said. "It ended a long time ago. There's only been an
illusion of a controversy created by a well-financed public
relations outfit. The idea that the FDA tells people this is safe
is offensive."
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