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Health risk assessment to xenoestrogen through atmospheric PM(2.5) particles: A case study in Suzhou.

Wang et al,

2025

Ecotoxicol Environ Saf

This study analyzed six xenoestrogens (hormone-disrupting chemicals including phthalates, BPA, and alkylphenols) in atmospheric particles at a university campus in China from 2021 to 2023. BPA was the most prevalent xenoestrogen detected, with concentrations of these chemicals being significantly higher in winter than summer, and the overall cancer and non-cancer health risks were below threshold limits for the general population. However, infants and young children showed significantly higher risk values compared to other age groups, indicating they face greater health risks from atmospheric exposure to these endocrine disruptors. The research provides important data for developing policies to reduce health risks from airborne xenoestrogen exposure, particularly for vulnerable populations like children.

Trends in NHANES Biomonitored Exposures in California and the United States following Enactment of California’s Proposition 65.

Knox et al,

2024

Environ Health Perspect

A nationwide study using CDC biomonitoring data found that California’s Proposition 65, which requires warnings about chemicals that cause cancer or reproductive harm, led to reduced exposures to listed chemicals across the entire United States, not just California. While blood and urine concentrations of 37 monitored chemicals generally declined over time, the researchers found evidence of problematic chemical substitution—for example, after bisphenol A (BPA) was listed, its concentrations dropped 15% but levels of the unlisted substitute bisphenol S (BPS) increased 20%. Californians generally had lower levels of harmful chemicals in their bodies compared to residents of other states, suggesting the law had additional protective effects. The findings indicate that transparency laws like Prop 65 can drive manufacturers to reformulate products nationwide, but regulations need to address entire chemical classes rather than individual substances to prevent companies from simply switching to similar but unlisted toxic chemicals.

Urinary bisphenol A and its interaction with CYP17A1 rs743572 are associated with breast cancer risk.

He et al,

2022

Chemosphere

This case-control study found that higher urinary bisphenol A (BPA) levels were significantly associated with increased breast cancer (BC) risk, with a 54% higher risk per 1-unit increase in log-transformed BPA (95% CI: 1.34–1.77, P < 0.001). Additionally, genetic variation in the CYP17A1 gene (rs743572) significantly modified this association, with individuals carrying both high BPA levels and the GA+AA genotype showing a 2.49-fold increased BC risk (P interaction = 0.020).

Endocrine-disrupting chemicals: A Systematic Review of Epidemiological Studies

Wan et al,

2022

Crit Rev Food Sci Nutr

A systematic review of 131 epidemiological studies examining endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs) and breast cancer risk found evidence that exposure to various EDCs—including pesticides (DDT/DDE, atrazine, dioxin), synthetic chemicals (BPA, phthalates, PFAS, PCBs, PBDEs), and other compounds found in everyday products—may elevate breast cancer risk, particularly when exposure occurs during early life. The review identified food as a major route of EDC exposure and emphasized that because most EDCs persist in the environment and accumulate in the body over time, long-term multi-generational health impacts need to be assessed. The authors call for improved exposure assessments of EDCs in food and food packaging, along with careful evaluation of their links to breast cancer development to inform policy-making and regulations aimed at protecting public health.

Exposure to bisphenol A and breast cancer risk in northern Mexican women.

López-Carrillo et al,

2021

Int Arch Occup Environ Health

This case–control study in Northern Mexican women (394 breast cancer cases, 404 matched controls) measured urinary free-BPA (BPA‑F) and found that the highest exposure group had a statistically significant 2.31‑fold increased odds of breast cancer (95% CI: 1.43–3.74) compared to the lowest group. The authors concluded that BPA‑F may act as an environmental cofactor in breast carcinogenesis, although findings need replication.

Risk of breast cancer and prediagnostic urinary excretion of bisphenol A, triclosan and parabens: The Multiethnic Cohort Study.

Wu et al,

2021

Int J Cancer

In a nested case-control study of over 1,000 breast cancer cases and matched controls from the Multiethnic Cohort, pre-diagnostic urinary concentrations of bisphenol A (BPA), triclosan, and parabens were evaluated in relation to breast cancer risk. BPA was not significantly associated with risk; the highest tertile of total parabens had OR ≈ 0.77 (95% CI: 0.62–0.97) relative to the lowest tertile, indicating a modest inverse association. These results suggest that the relationships between common endocrine-disrupting chemicals and breast cancer may be more complex than anticipated and vary by exposure type.

Plastic additives affect estrogenic pathways and lipid metabolism in precision – cut – liver slices in Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua).

Andersen et al,

2025

Sci Totl Environ

This study investigated the effects of three common plastic additives (DEHP, BPA, and benzotriazoles) on Atlantic cod liver tissue using precision-cut liver slices exposed to various concentrations of these chemicals individually and in mixtures. The researchers found that BPA and chemical mixtures caused estrogenic effects, significantly increasing vitellogenin (a female egg protein) production and related gene expression in male juvenile cod. The study also observed changes in liver metabolism genes, with mixture exposures showing potentially different effects than individual chemical exposures. The results suggest these plastic additives can disrupt hormone systems in fish, with BPA being the primary driver of estrogenic effects, though the interaction effects between chemicals require further investigation.

Evaluation of estrogenic and anti-estrogenic activity of endocrine disruptors using breast cancer spheroids: a comparative study of T47D and MCF7 cell lines in 2D and 3D models

Barbaro et al,

2025

Front Toxicol

The study examined the estrogenic and anti-estrogenic effects of three endocrine disruptors: Bisphenol A (BPA), which mimics estrogen, 17 -Estradiol (E2), the endogenous nuclear estrogen receptor ligand, and Fulvestrant (FUL), a drug that interferes with proper estrogen function. The experiment measured the influence of the endocrine disruptors in vitro using 2D and 3D T47D and MCF7 cells, which are estrogen receptor-positive human breast cancer cells. The study results concluded that E2 and BPA increased the expression of the estrogen-regulated marker pS2 and decreased TGF 3. Meanwhile, FUL inhibited E2 and BPA’s expression of the estrogen-regulated markers, meaning FUL reversed the effects of the other two endocrine disruptors.

Associations between phenol and paraben exposure and the risk of developing breast cancer in adult women: a cross-sectional study.

Xiong et al,

2025

Sci Rep

A large U.S. study of 4,455 people found that exposure to triclosan (TRS)—an antibacterial chemical commonly found in soaps, toothpaste, and personal care products—was associated with more than double the risk of breast cancer at moderate exposure levels, with the relationship following an inverted U-shape pattern. The association was strongest among overweight individuals, people under 60 years old, and white participants, while other tested chemicals (including bisphenol A, benzophenone-3, and parabens) showed no significant link to breast cancer risk. These findings suggest that triclosan exposure may be an important modifiable risk factor for breast cancer, particularly for certain population groups, though more research is needed to understand the underlying mechanisms and confirm causality.

Ginger volatile oil inhibits the growth of MDA-MB-231 in the bisphenol A environment by altering gut microbial diversity.

Luo et al,

2024

Heliyon

A mouse study found that ginger volatile oil (GVO) reduced triple-negative breast cancer tumor growth in animals exposed to bisphenol A (BPA), a common plastic chemical known to promote cancer, with the effect linked to restoration of healthy gut bacteria. BPA exposure disrupted the gut microbiome by reducing bacterial diversity and beneficial bacteria like Lactobacillus, but treatment with ginger oil reversed these changes and increased the ratio of beneficial bacteria while decreasing harmful bacteria. The findings suggest that ginger compounds may counteract BPA’s cancer-promoting effects through their impact on the gut microbiome, offering a potential dietary strategy to mitigate harm from plastic chemical exposure, though human studies are needed to confirm these results.

Exposure to endocrine disrupting chemicals from beverage packaging materials and risk assessment for consumers.

Marchiandi et al,

2024

J Hazard Mater

A study analyzing 162 non-alcoholic beverages found that 63 endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs) were present in 144 products, with concentrations highest in metal-canned beverages and significantly lower or absent in glass, plastic, and carton packaging. Bisphenol A (BPA) levels were notably elevated in canned drinks compared to identical products from the same manufacturers packaged in glass or plastic, and researchers identified two previously unknown BPA structural isomers in beverages for the first time. The calculated daily BPA exposure from average beverage consumption (364 mL/day) exceeded the European Food Safety Authority’s revised safety guideline by up to 2,000-fold, suggesting that regular consumption of canned non-alcoholic beverages—particularly by young children—poses a potential health hazard due to EDC exposure from packaging materials.

The benefits of removing toxic chemicals from plastics.

Cropper et al,

2024

PNAS

This study examined the health impacts of three major plastic-associated chemicals—BPA, DEHP, and PBDEs—across 38 countries representing one-third of the global population. The researchers found that in 2015, these chemicals were linked to approximately 5.4 million cases of heart disease, 346,000 strokes, 164,000 deaths among older adults, and 11.7 million lost IQ points in children due to prenatal exposure. The total economic cost of these health impacts was estimated at $1.5 trillion. The study suggests that if exposure levels had been reduced earlier, hundreds of thousands of deaths and millions of IQ points could have been prevented.

Endocrine disruptors: Unravelling the link between chemical exposure and Women’s reproductive health.

Hassan et al,

2024

Environ Res

Endocrine Disrupting Chemicals (EDCs)—including bisphenol A, phthalates, parabens, pesticides, and heavy metals commonly found in pharmaceuticals, cosmetics, and packaging—are widespread environmental pollutants that interfere with the body’s hormone system. Research shows EDCs have harmful effects on women’s reproductive health, contributing to conditions such as endometriosis, polycystic ovary syndrome, uterine fibroids, premature ovarian failure, menstrual irregularities, and infertility. This review emphasizes the need for healthcare professionals to consider environmental exposures when evaluating patients, highlights potential mechanisms by which EDCs affect female reproduction, and discusses how nutritional interventions and stricter environmental regulations could help reduce EDC-related health risks. Understanding the link between EDCs and women’s health is crucial for developing protective strategies, informing treatment approaches, and shaping public policies to safeguard reproductive and overall well-being. The study seeks to advise that couples attempting to conceive should avoid endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs) such as BPA, pesticides, and phthalates. Following this advice is found to be crucial during the prenatal and periconceptional periods, where fetal development and growth are critical in this window.

In vitro transcriptomic analyses reveal pathway perturbations, estrogenic activities, and potencies of data-poor BPA alternative chemicals.

Matteo et al,

2023

Toxicol Sci

A high-throughput transcriptomic study using MCF-7 breast cancer cells exposed to BPA and 15 alternative chemicals (0.0005-100 µM for 48 hours) found that 8 alternative chemicals activated estrogen receptor alpha (ERα), with bisphenol AF identified as the most potent, followed by BPA and bisphenol C, and benchmark concentration analysis revealing that BPA and transcriptionally active alternatives enriched similar gene sets associated with increased cell division and cancer-related processes at comparable concentrations. Global transcriptomic and ERα-specific points of departure produced highly consistent potency rankings, and pathway analysis showed that active alternatives induced hazards similar to BPA through shared molecular mechanisms. These findings reveal that many BPA replacement chemicals used since initial 2010 Canadian regulatory action are not safer alternatives and may pose similar or greater hazards at comparable exposure levels despite being data-poor compounds with limited toxicological assessment, supporting the use of transcriptomic profiling for read-across risk assessment of structurally related chemicals and raising concerns about regrettable substitution in which one harmful chemical is simply replaced with equally harmful alternatives.

Food Thermal Labels are a Source of Dietary Exposure to Bisphenol S and Other Color Developers.

Xu et al,

2023

Environ Sci Technol

This review investigates the migration of bisphenols and alternative color developers from thermal labels on cling-wrapped fresh food, identifying them as significant dietary sources of these compounds. While no BPA was found in packaging, high concentrations of bisphenol S (BPS) and other alternatives were detected, particularly in thermal labels. Migration studies revealed that BPS and related compounds leach into food, especially fish, raising potential health concerns. These findings highlight the need for further risk assessments regarding these alternative chemicals in food packaging due to past findings about BPA being an endocrine disruptor. This will help mitigate exposure risks and ensure consumer safety.

Bisphenols and alternative developers in thermal paper receipts from the U.S. market assessed by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy.

Miller et al,

2023

Environ Pollut

A 2022 study tested 571 cash register receipts from U.S. retailers to assess endocrine-disrupting chemicals in thermal paper and compared findings to a 2017 study. Bisphenol S (BPS) was found in 85% of receipts, Pergafast 201 in 12%, and bisphenol A (BPA) in only 1%, indicating a shift away from BPA. National retailers were more likely than local ones to use non-bisphenol alternatives. These findings highlight potential health risks from handling receipts, as BPS and other chemicals can still pose significant exposure concerns.

A sensitive environmental forensic method that determines bisphenol S and A exposure within receipt-handling through fingerprint analysis.

Jang et al,

2022

J Hazard Mater

This study investigates human exposure to bisphenol A (BPA) and bisphenol S (BPS) by handling thermal paper receipts. The study analyzed the BPS and BPA concentrations from the fingerprints of individuals who handled thermal paper receipts and compared them to those of people who didn’t handle thermal paper receipts. The results found that 20–40 μg of BPS or BPA is transferred to human skin as seen through the fingerprint after contact with thermal papers containing 100–300 μg. Additionally, the transfer of BPA was 2.9–5.2 times higher than BPS, which is consistent with higher concentrations in receipts. However, washing hands significantly reduced the transfer of both BPS and BPA. This is important because the study also determined lipid metabolism was affected at concentrations greater than 10 mg/L. Additionally, it had adverse effects on the growth of water flees, indicating that it may potentially have some effect on human development as well.

Influence of Temperature on the Quantity of Bisphenol A in Bottled Drinking Water.

Ginter-Kramarczyk et al,

2022

Int J Environ Res Public Health

A recent study highlights the risk of Bisphenol A (BPA) exposure from bottled water, emphasizing how temperature can influence BPA leaching into the water. While BPA isn’t used in PET bottle manufacturing, contamination can occur due to recycled materials. Findings indicate that BPA levels in bottled water increase with temperature, even when not at the highest temperatures. BPA, a known endocrine-disrupting chemical (EDC), is linked to reproductive health issues, developmental disorders, and even cancer.

Environmental endocrine disruptor concentrations in urine samples from Mexican Indigenous women.

Rodríguez-Báez et al,

2022

Environ Sci Pollut Res

The following study explores the presence of endocrine disruptors such as phthalates (specifically mono-2-ethyl phthalate and mono-n-butyl phthalate), bisphenol A (BPA), and 1-hydroxypyrene in the urine samples of marginalized Indigenous populations. The study found that 100% of the women sampled showed exposure to these harmful chemicals, with higher concentrations than observed in similar studies from other communities. This increased exposure is linked to environmental and cultural factors, such as the common use of plastic containers and practices such as burning garbage. The women sampled were found to have especially high levels of mono-2-ethyl phthalate, which suggests significant exposure to di(2-ethylhexyl) phthalate. These findings highlight the vulnerability of indigenous communities to pollution due to a lack of awareness, limited healthcare access, and inadequate regulatory measures.

Occurrence and seasonal disparity of emerging endocrine disrupting chemicals in a drinking water supply system and associated health risk.

Kumawat et al,

2022

Sci Rep

A study of drinking water found widespread contamination with phthalates (plastic chemicals) and bisphenol-A, with DEHP—the most common phthalate detected—exceeding safety limits in concentrations up to 8,351 µg/L in winter and 410 µg/L in summer, posing potential health risks to consumers. The research revealed significant seasonal variations with higher contamination in winter than summer, and health risk assessment showed that DEHP exposure from drinking water alone exceeded safe levels (hazard quotient >1), raising concerns about hormone disruption and potential breast cancer risk. These findings highlight an urgent need for water treatment plants to implement better technologies to remove these endocrine-disrupting chemicals and ensure safe drinking water, as current contamination levels may threaten both human and environmental health.

Endocrine disrupting chemicals and breast cancer: a systematic review of epidemiological studies.

Wan et al,

2022

Crit Rev Food Sci Nutr

This systematic review of 131 epidemiological studies evaluated the association between various endocrine-disrupting chemicals, including phthalates and hormonal exposures like contraceptive pills, and the risk of breast cancer. It found that several EDCs, particularly phthalates and oral contraceptive use, were consistently associated with increased breast cancer risk across multiple studies.

Update on the Health Effects of Bisphenol A: Overwhelming Evidence of Harm.

Vom Saal et al,

2021

Endocrinology

A comprehensive review of bisphenol A (BPA) research spanning over 20 years—from the landmark 1997 study showing reproductive effects in male mouse offspring at 2 µg/kg/day through the CLARITY-BPA study designed to bridge regulatory and scientific disagreements—found that thousands of animal studies and over 100 epidemiological studies report adverse effects at low doses, with CLARITY-BPA showing effects at 2.5 µg/kg/day, leading independent experts to recommend dropping the lowest observed adverse effect level 20,000-fold from 50,000 to 2.5 µg/kg/day. Despite this overwhelming evidence, the FDA continues to assert BPA is safe by rejecting low-dose data as “not biologically plausible” based on four incorrect assumptions criticized by the Endocrine Society as violating basic principles of endocrinology: that dose responses must be monotonic, thresholds exist below which there are no effects, both sexes must respond similarly, and only traditional toxicological guideline studies are valid. The review highlights a fundamental divide between regulatory approaches and endocrine science, demonstrating that traditional toxicology methods are insufficient for evaluating endocrine-disrupting chemicals like BPA, which can cause non-monotonic dose responses, sex-specific effects, and low-dose effects that challenge conventional assumptions about chemical safety, yet regulatory agencies continue to ignore modern endocrinology principles in favor of outdated toxicological paradigms.

Bisphenol AF promotes estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer cell proliferation through amphiregulin-mediated crosstalk with receptor tyrosine kinase signaling.

Zhao et al,

2019

PLOS One

Bisphenol AF (BPAF)—a chemical increasingly used to replace BPA in consumer products—shows even stronger estrogen-like effects than BPA and promotes the growth of estrogen receptor-positive (ER+) breast cancer cells through multiple hormone signaling pathways. Laboratory studies revealed that BPAF stimulates cancer cell proliferation by activating estrogen receptors and upregulating AREG, a growth-promoting gene, with blocking either estrogen receptors or AREG preventing BPAF’s cancer-promoting effects. These findings challenge the assumption that BPA alternatives are safer, demonstrating that BPAF may pose equal or greater breast cancer risks than the chemical it’s replacing, and highlight the urgent need for human studies to assess BPAF’s impact on breast cancer risk before its continued widespread use in products marketed as “BPA-free.”

The effects of bisphenol A, benzyl butyl phthalate, and di(2-ethylhexyl) phthalate on estrogen receptor alpha in estrogen receptor-positive cells under hypoxia.

Park et al,

2019

Environ Pollut

This study investigated how three endocrine-disrupting chemicals (BPA, BBP, and DEHP) affect estrogen receptor alpha (ERα) activity under normal and low-oxygen (hypoxic) conditions in breast and endometrial cancer cells. The researchers found that BPA and BBP activated ERα at specific concentrations, while DEHP did not, but all three chemicals enhanced ERα-mediated gene activity and decreased ERα protein levels under hypoxic conditions. BPA and BBP also affected hypoxia-related factors, decreasing hypoxia-inducible factor-1 activity while increasing VEGF (a blood vessel growth factor) secretion in breast cancer cells, whereas DEHP had different effects. The findings suggest that these endocrine disruptors can alter ERα regulation under low-oxygen conditions, which may influence disease processes since hypoxia is common in tumors and other pathological states.

Bisphenol A exposure through receipt handling and its association with insulin resistance among female cashiers

Lee et al,

2018

Environ Int

A study of 54 female cashiers in South Korea found that handling thermal paper receipts without gloves doubled their urinary BPA levels during work shifts, but wearing gloves completely prevented this increase in exposure. Higher BPA levels were associated with elevated fasting insulin and insulin resistance, markers of metabolic dysfunction that can lead to diabetes and cardiovascular disease. The findings demonstrate that cashiers face significant occupational BPA exposure from receipt handling and that simple protective measures like wearing gloves can effectively eliminate this exposure route, offering an immediate and practical intervention to protect workers’ health.

Breast cancer is associated with methylation and expression of the a disintegrin and metalloproteinase domain 33 (ADAM33) gene affected by endocrine‑disrupting chemicals.

Yang et al,

2018

Oncol Rep

This study investigated whether exposure to bisphenol A (BPA) and phthalate metabolites affects breast cancer risk through epigenetic changes in the ADAM33 gene, which plays a role in cancer progression. The researchers conducted a case-control study with 44 breast cancer patients and 22 controls, analyzing ADAM33 gene methylation patterns in blood samples and measuring urinary concentrations of endocrine-disrupting chemicals. They found that certain phthalate metabolites (MEHHP, MECPP, MEOHP) were positively associated with increased methylation of the ADAM33 gene, which was linked to higher gene expression levels. Surprisingly, the study suggests these phthalate metabolites may have a protective effect against breast cancer by increasing ADAM33 methylation and expression, contrary to the typical expectation that endocrine disruptors increase cancer risk.

Environmental estrogen-like endocrine disrupting chemicals and breast cancer.

Morgan et al,

2017

Molec Cell Endocrinol

This study examines the role of environmental estrogen-like endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EEDs) in breast cancer development. EEDs are synthetic compounds that mimic estrogen, and the ones being studied in this paper include polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), bisphenol A (BPA), and phthalates. The results of the study show that of the EEDs tested, only one type of PCB, PCB138, had a strong association with the formation of breast cancer, where as phthalates (and it metabolites) but and BPA showed no strong correlation. Additionaly, the researchers identify that these EEDs promote the proliferation of breast cancer cells, induce epigenetic changes that may increase susceptibility to cancer, as well as alter developmental pathways during critical windows of breast development.

Effects of Low-Dose Bisphenol A on DNA Damage and Proliferation of Breast Cells: The Role of c-Myc.

Pfeifer et al,

2015

Environ Health Perspect

This study investigates how low concentrations of Bisphenol A (BPA) affect DNA integrity and cell proliferation in breast cells, focusing on the involvement of the oncogene c-Myc. They found that exposure to low doses of BPA resulted in significant DNA damage in estrogen receptor-alpha (ERα)-negative mammary cells, meaning that BPA can promote cancer in ways independent of standard estrogen receptor pathways. Additionally, BPA exposure led to the upregulation of c-Myc, which is a gene known to regulate cell proliferation and death., and the study did observe enhanced proliferation of ERα-negative mammary cells upon BPA exposure. This suggests that BPA may promote cancer pathways through c-Myc activation. This was then confirmed when the researchers silenced c-Myc gene expression and found that oncogenic effects in the presence of BPA were decreased. Overall, these findings raise concerns about BPA’s potential role in breast cancer formation, even at low exposure levels.

Disruptive environmental chemicals and cellular mechanisms that confer resistance to cell death.

Narayanan et al,

2015

Carcinogenesis

This study explores the linkage between environmental chemical exposures and cellular resistance to cell death, a carcinogenic trait. The researchers in this study specifically investigate BPA, chlorothalonil, dibutyl phthalate, and more because of their disruptive effects that may be involved in these carcinogenic pathways. The researchers found that arsenic interferes with cellular signaling pathways and induces oxidative stress, leading to impaired apoptosis; dioxins bind to aryl hydrocarbon receptors (AHRs), which alters gene expression and disrupts normal cell death processes; BPA mimics the estrogen hormone, affecting hormonal balance and promoting cell survival pathways that inhibit cell death. By allowing cells to evade cell death, these environmental chemicals can promote the survival of cells with genetic mutations and therefore increase the risk of cancer development.

Endocrine disruptors and asthma-associated chemicals in consumer products.

Dodson et al,

2012

Environ Health Perspect

This study analyzed 213 everyday products, including cosmetics, cleaners, and personal care items, for endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs) and asthma-related compounds. Testing revealed 55 chemicals, with fragranced products and sunscreens containing the highest levels. Vinyl products were also found to contain significant amounts of bis(2-ethylhexyl) phthalate (DEHP), a known EDC. Many harmful chemicals were not listed on product labels, limiting consumer ability to avoid them. These results highlight the presence of potentially harmful chemicals in commonly used products, raising concerns about their widespread use in household and personal care items.

Bisphenol A: an endocrine disruptor with widespread exposure and multiple effects.

Rubin et al,

2011

J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol

Bisphenol A (BPA) is a widely produced chemical used in plastics and food container linings, with frequent human exposure due to its leaching into food and beverages. BPA, a known endocrine disruptor, was initially deemed a weak estrogen but has shown potency comparable to estradiol, a form of estrogen, shown to affect multiple hormonal pathways. Studies on rodents reveal adverse effects at levels below and at the current acceptable daily intake, raising concerns about human health impacts about concentration. BPA’s estrogenic effects highlight the importance of investigating BPA’s complex, widespread impacts on health.

Bisphenol-A exposure and risk of breast and prostate cancer in the Spanish European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition study.

Salamanca-Fernández et al,

2021

Environ Health

This case-cohort study within the EPIC-Spain cohort assessed serum bisphenol A (BPA) levels in relation to breast and prostate cancer risk among 4,812 participants. While no significant association was found between BPA and breast cancer, increased BPA levels were associated with a higher risk of prostate cancer.

Low dose bisphenol S or ethinyl estradiol exposures during the perinatal period alter female mouse mammary gland development.

Kolla et al,

2018

Reprod Toxicol

A developmental toxicology study exposed CD-1 mice to bisphenol S (BPS) at 2 or 200 μg/kg/day or ethinyl estradiol (EE2) at 0.01 or 1 μg/kg/day during pregnancy and lactation, then examined mammary glands of female offspring at three developmental stages (pre-puberty, puberty, and early adulthood) for growth parameters, histopathology, cell proliferation, and hormone receptor expression. The study revealed age- and dose-specific effects of BPS on mammary gland development that differed from both EE2 effects and previously reported bisphenol A (BPA) effects. These findings suggest that individual xenoestrogens—synthetic chemicals with hormonal activities—may have unique effects on mammary tissue development, supporting the hypothesis that endocrine-disrupting chemicals could contribute to breast diseases and dysfunction through disruption of normal mammary gland development, though each compound may act through distinct mechanisms.

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