WASHINGTON — A chemical used to make baby bottles and other shatterproof plastic containers could be linked to a range of hormonal problems, a preliminary government report has found.
The report was greeted by some environmental groups as confirmation of their concerns, while chemical-makers latched on to the report’s preliminary nature and its authors’ warning against drawing overly worrisome conclusions.
The federal National Toxicology Program said Tuesday that experiments on rats found precancerous tumors, urinary-tract problems and early puberty when the animals were fed or injected with low doses of the plastics chemical bisphenol A.
While such animal studies provide only “limited evidence” of bisphenol’s developmental risks, the group’s draft report stresses that the possible effects on humans “cannot be dismissed.”
The group is made up of scientists from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Food and Drug Administration and the National Institutes of Health.
More than 90 percent of Americans are exposed to trace amounts of bisphenol, according to the CDC. The chemical leaches out of water bottles, the lining of cans and other items made with it.
The American Chemistry Council, which represents manufacturers, said the report “affirms that there are no serious or high-level concerns for adverse effects of bisphenol on human reproduction and development.”
Among the manufacturers of bisphenol are Dow Chemical Co. and BASF Group.
The group said it supports additional research to determine whether adverse effects seen in animals “are of any significance to human health.”
The toxicology group’s findings echo those of researchers assembled by the National Institutes of Health, who in August called for more research on bisphenol in humans.
The FDA in November said there is “no reason at this time to ban or otherwise restrict its use.” The agency did not immediately have any comment Tuesday about the new report.
But growing concern about the chemical has pushed many consumers toward glass alternatives and triggered investigations by state and federal lawmakers.



