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Medical Forum / Diseases and Disorders / Prostate Cancer / May 2005

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Food Containers Possible PCa Cause?

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Ken - 01 May 2005 03:18 GMT
Food wrap linked to prostate cancer
Jonathan Leake, Science Editor, The Times - Britain

A CHEMICAL used to make food wrapping and line tin cans could be the
cause of surging prostate cancer rates in men, says a study.
Bisphenol A is widely used in the food industry to make polycarbonate
drinks bottles and the resins used to line tin cans, even though it is
known to leach into food and has long been suspected of disrupting
human sex hormones.

The new research suggests the small but constant level of bisphenol A
entering people's diet has a particular impact on pregnant women,
disastrously altering the development of unborn baby sons.

The chemical causes microscopic changes in the developing prostate
gland but these are not apparent at birth. Instead, they show up years
later when they lead to a range of prostate diseases, such as
enlargement and cancer. The changes can also cause malformation of the
urethra, the channel for urine.

In Britain, rates of the cancer have surged to about 27,000 new
diagnoses and 10,000 deaths a year. It is now almost as big a killer as
breast cancer in women.

Frederick vom Saal, professor of biological sciences at the University
of Missouri, who led the study, warns: "During foetal life small
amounts of such oestrogenic chemicals could permanently disrupt
cellular control systems and predispose the prostate to disease."

In the study vom Saal and his colleagues fed tiny amounts of bisphenol
A to pregnant mice.Another group of pregnant mice was fed similar
amounts of ethinylestradiol, which is used in the contraceptive pill.
The researchers wanted to examine whether similar damage to the
prostate occurred when women taking the pill accidentally become
pregnant.

The results showed that even tiny amounts of both hormones - far
lower relative to body size than what humans are exposed to - could
disrupt development of the prostate gland.

About 2.8m tons of bisphenol is produced every year worldwide and it
has been used in babies' drinks bottles and teats in addition to food
packaging.

Roger Kirby, consultant urologist at St George's hospital, London,
said the new research could help explain at least some of the reasons
for the surge in prostate cancer rates.

"We are seeing more prostate cancer, and are also seeing it in
younger people. So clearly there could be some environmental factor,"
he said.
george conklin - 01 May 2005 13:20 GMT
> Food wrap linked to prostate cancer
> Jonathan Leake, Science Editor, The Times - Britain
[quoted text clipped - 47 lines]
> younger people. So clearly there could be some environmental factor,"
> he said.

   Plastic bottles for liquor are also suspect.
 
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