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      Scientific Challenges in the Risk Assessment of Food Contact Materials

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          Abstract

          Background:

          Food contact articles (FCAs) are manufactured from food contact materials (FCMs) that include plastics, paper, metal, glass, and printing inks. Chemicals can migrate from FCAs into food during storage, processing, and transportation. Food contact materials’ safety is evaluated using chemical risk assessment (RA). Several challenges to the RA of FCAs exist.

          Objectives:

          We review regulatory requirements for RA of FCMs in the United States and Europe, identify gaps in RA, and highlight opportunities for improving the protection of public health. We intend to initiate a discussion in the wider scientific community to enhance the safety of food contact articles.

          Discussion:

          Based on our evaluation of the evidence, we conclude that current regulations are insufficient for addressing chemical exposures from FCAs. RA currently focuses on monomers and additives used in the manufacture of products, but it does not cover all substances formed in the production processes. Several factors hamper effective RA for many FCMs, including a lack of information on chemical identity, inadequate assessment of hazardous properties, and missing exposure data. Companies make decisions about the safety of some food contact chemicals (FCCs) without review by public authorities. Some chemical migration limits cannot be enforced because analytical standards are unavailable.

          Conclusion:

          We think that exposures to hazardous substances migrating from FCAs require more attention. We recommend a) limiting the number and types of chemicals authorized for manufacture and b) developing novel approaches for assessing the safety of chemicals in FCAs, including unidentified chemicals that form during or after production. https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP644

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          Most cited references40

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          Most Plastic Products Release Estrogenic Chemicals: A Potential Health Problem That Can Be Solved

          Background: Chemicals having estrogenic activity (EA) reportedly cause many adverse health effects, especially at low (picomolar to nanomolar) doses in fetal and juvenile mammals. Objectives: We sought to determine whether commercially available plastic resins and products, including baby bottles and other products advertised as bisphenol A (BPA) free, release chemicals having EA. Methods: We used a roboticized MCF-7 cell proliferation assay, which is very sensitive, accurate, and repeatable, to quantify the EA of chemicals leached into saline or ethanol extracts of many types of commercially available plastic materials, some exposed to common-use stresses (microwaving, ultraviolet radiation, and/or autoclaving). Results: Almost all commercially available plastic products we sampled—independent of the type of resin, product, or retail source—leached chemicals having reliably detectable EA, including those advertised as BPA free. In some cases, BPA-free products released chemicals having more EA than did BPA-containing products. Conclusions: Many plastic products are mischaracterized as being EA free if extracted with only one solvent and not exposed to common-use stresses. However, we can identify existing compounds, or have developed, monomers, additives, or processing agents that have no detectable EA and have similar costs. Hence, our data suggest that EA-free plastic products exposed to common-use stresses and extracted by saline and ethanol solvents could be cost-effectively made on a commercial scale and thereby eliminate a potential health risk posed by most currently available plastic products that leach chemicals having EA into food products.
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            Estimating burden and disease costs of exposure to endocrine-disrupting chemicals in the European union.

            Rapidly increasing evidence has documented that endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs) contribute substantially to disease and disability.
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              Assessing the carcinogenic potential of low-dose exposures to chemical mixtures in the environment: the challenge ahead

              Summary Low-dose exposures to common environmental chemicals that are deemed safe individually may be combining to instigate carcinogenesis, thereby contributing to the incidence of cancer. This risk may be overlooked by current regulatory practices and needs to be vigorously investigated.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Environ Health Perspect
                Environ. Health Perspect
                EHP
                Environmental Health Perspectives
                Environmental Health Perspectives
                0091-6765
                1552-9924
                11 September 2017
                September 2017
                : 125
                : 9
                : 095001
                Affiliations
                [ 1 ]Food Packaging Forum Foundation , Zurich, Switzerland
                [ 2 ]Department of Biological & Environmental Sciences, University of Gothenburg , Sweden
                [ 3 ]Independent Consultant, Germantown, Maryland, USA
                [ 4 ]Institute for the Environment, Brunel University London , Uxbridge, UK
                [ 5 ]Environmental Health Sciences , Charlottesville, Virginia, USA
                [ 6 ]Department of Chemistry, Carnegie Mellon University , Pittsburg, Pennsylvania, USA
                [ 7 ]Department of Integrative Physiology and Pathobiology, Tufts University School of Medicine , Boston, Massachusetts, USA
                [ 8 ]Department of Pediatrics, New York University School of Medicine , New York, New York, USA
                [ 9 ]DTU Food, Technical University of Denmark , Copenhagen, Denmark (currently at European Environmental Agency, Copenhagen, Denmark)
                [ 10 ]Research Centre for Toxic Compounds in the Environment, Masaryk University , Brno, Czech Republic
                [ 11 ]Institute for Chemical and Bioengineering, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH) , Zurich, Switzerland
                Author notes
                Address correspondence to J. Muncke, Food Packaging Forum, Staffelstrasse 8, 8045 Zurich, Switzerland. Telephone: 41-44-5155255. Email: jane.muncke@ 123456fp-forum.org
                Article
                EHP644
                10.1289/EHP644
                5915200
                28893723
                c5524c6c-e8f7-4ec4-9d8b-fb5afd396e51

                EHP is an open-access journal published with support from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, National Institutes of Health. All content is public domain unless otherwise noted.

                History
                : 10 June 2016
                : 08 June 2017
                : 09 June 2017
                Categories
                Commentary

                Public health
                Public health

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