Research Results
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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.
2024
Br J Cancer
This comprehensive meta-analysis of 63 studies found that women who never smoked but were exposed to secondhand smoke had a 24% increased risk of breast cancer, with the risk rising to 45% in some exposure settings. The breast cancer risk increased with greater exposure duration, intensity, and cumulative exposure—women exposed to secondhand smoke for 40 years had a 29% increased risk, while those exposed to the equivalent of 20 cigarettes per day had a 38% increased risk. The analysis showed the strongest associations for home exposure (17% increased risk) and combined home or workplace exposure (24% increased risk), demonstrating clear dose-response relationships where more exposure meant higher breast cancer risk. These findings are particularly important for public health policy because they show that even non-smokers face significant breast cancer risk from breathing others’ tobacco smoke, supporting the need for comprehensive smoke-free laws in homes, workplaces, and public spaces.
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.
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.
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.
2023
Environ Sci Technol
The following study discusses a strategic framework to improve how chemicals are managed in North America. The Essential-Use Approach is a policy that prioritizes restricting the use of chemicals based on necessity and safety. It proposes three guiding questions: Is the chemical essential to the product’s function? Is it the safest option? Is it necessary for health and safety? They also prioritize speed of assesments so that chemicals can be quickly phased out if evidence suggests danger to human health. This study is a call for change and aims to become a tool to simplify decision-making for regulating organizations, help businesses avoid liability related to harmful chemicals, and ultimately improve public health by ensuring only the safest substances are used in consumer products.
2023
Cancer Epidemiol Biomark Prev
A pooled analysis of six European cohorts including 199,719 women followed for 3.6 million person-years found that long-term exposure to fine particulate matter (PM₂.₅) was associated with a 6% increased breast cancer risk per 5 μg/m³ increase. The association was strongest among middle-aged women (ages 50-54) and never-smokers, and notably, the cohorts studied represented the lower range of air pollution concentrations in Europe, suggesting that even relatively low levels of air pollution may contribute to breast cancer risk. These findings add to mounting evidence that air pollution—particularly fine particulate matter from traffic, industry, and combustion sources—is an environmental breast cancer risk factor operating independently of established risk factors, with important implications for public health policy, urban planning, and air quality regulations aimed at reducing population-level cancer burden, especially given that air pollution exposure is largely involuntary and affects entire populations.
2022
Sleep Breath
A comprehensive meta-analysis of 31 prospective cohort studies including 9.3 million participants found that night-shift work was associated with a modest but statistically significant 2.9% increased breast cancer risk overall, with risk escalating to 8.6% for women working night shifts for more than 10 years and 5.3% for rotating night-shift work specifically. Night-shift workers also showed a 3.1% increased risk of cardiovascular mortality compared to day workers, highlighting broader health impacts beyond cancer. These findings provide strong epidemiological evidence that chronic circadian disruption from night-shift work increases breast cancer risk in a dose-dependent manner, with implications for the millions of women worldwide working non-standard hours in healthcare, manufacturing, transportation, and service industries—suggesting the need for policy interventions to limit long-term night-shift exposure and provide enhanced health monitoring for affected workers.
2022
Molecules
A review of endocrine-disrupting compounds (EDCs) in drinking water examines this emerging class of environmental contaminants—ranging from naturally occurring to synthetic compounds—that exist as complex mixtures at trace levels but can cause adverse health effects even at low concentrations. The review covers the perceived and actual health risks of EDC exposure through water ingestion (a major human exposure route), regulatory efforts to limit contamination, and analytical methods including advanced sample preparation, instrumentation, and bioassays for multiclass EDC identification and quantitation. Given that human exposure to EDCs via drinking water poses significant health concerns even at trace concentrations, the ability to detect and evaluate EDC contamination with high sensitivity and accuracy is critically important for protecting public health and informing regulatory policy.
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.
2019
Environ Int
A systematic review of 342 peer-reviewed articles covering 202 unique chemicals used in consumer products analyzed exposure pathways, functional uses, product applications, exposure routes, and associated health risks, finding that phthalates, bisphenol-A, and polybrominated diphenyl ethers were the most frequently studied chemicals, with frequently reported uses including plasticizers, polymers/monomers, and flame retardants in food contact materials, personal care products, cosmetics, furniture, flooring, and electronics. The analysis revealed that publication volume on chemicals tends to surge following major regulatory changes or exposure incidents rather than before market introduction, indicating a reactive rather than proactive approach to chemical safety assessment. These findings highlight the critical gap between the increasingly diverse array of chemicals used in consumer products and our lagging understanding of their exposure pathways and human health risks, emphasizing the urgent need to develop capacity and mechanisms for identifying health risks prior to chemical releases rather than after exposure incidents or regulatory action, to enable preventive rather than reactive public health protection.