BREASTFEEDING MAY EXPOSE INFANTS TO TOXIC CHEMICALS
A widely used class of industrial chemicals
linked with cancer and interference with immune function--perfluorinated
alkylate substances, or PFASs--appears to build up in infants by 20%-30% for
each month they're breastfed, according to a new study co-authored by experts
from Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. It is the first study to show
the extent to which PFASs are transferred to babies through breast milk, and to
quantify their levels over time.
"We knew that
small amounts of PFAS can occur in breast milk, but our serial blood analyses
now show a buildup in the infants, the longer they are breastfed," said
Philippe Grandjean, adjunct professor of environmental health at Harvard Chan
School.
The study appeared
online August 20, 2015 in Environmental Science & Technology.
Other study authors were from Danish universities and the Faroese Hospital
System.
PFASs are used to make
products resistant to water, grease, and stains. They've been in use for more
than 60 years in products such as stain-proof textiles, waterproof clothing,
some food packaging, paints, and lubricants, and are known to contaminate drinking
water in the U.S. near various production facilities. These compounds--which
tend to bioaccumulate in food chains and can persist for a long time in the
body--are found regularly in the blood of animals and humans worldwide, and
have been linked with reproductive toxicity, endocrine disruption, and immune
system dysfunction.
The researchers
followed 81 children who were born in the Faroe Islands between 1997-2000,
looking at levels of five types of PFASs in their blood at birth and ages 11
months, 18 months, and 5 years. They also looked at PFAS levels in mothers of
the children at week 32 of pregnancy.
They found that, in
children who were exclusively breastfed, PFAS concentrations in the blood
increased by roughly 20%-30% each month, with lower increases among children
who were partially breastfed. In some cases, by the end of breastfeeding,
children's serum concentration levels of PFASs exceeded that of their mothers'.
One type of
PFAS--perfluorohexanesulfonate--did not increase with breastfeeding. After
breastfeeding was stopped, concentrations of all of five types of PFASs
decreased.
The results suggest
that breast milk is a major source of PFAS exposure during infancy.
"There is no
reason to discourage breastfeeding, but we are concerned that these pollutants
are transferred to the next generation at a very vulnerable age. Unfortunately,
the current U.S. legislation does not require any testing of chemical
substances like PFASs for their transfer to babies and any related adverse
effects," Grandjean said.
Funding for the study
came from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, NIH
(ES012199); the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (R830758); the Danish
Council for Strategic Research (09-063094); and the Danish Environmental
Protection Agency as part of the environmental support program DANCEA (Danish
Cooperation for Environment in the Arctic).
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