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Bottle and can chemical linked to heart problems

Study confirms that higher levels of Bisphenol A mean higher risk of heart disease
By
WebMD Health News
Medically Reviewed by Dr Farah Ahmed
contemplating older woman

13th January 2010 - It’s estimated that nearly everyone carries the plastics chemical Bisphenol A in their bodies. However, those with the highest levels have the highest risk of heart disease, according to the latest findings.

Bisphenol A (BPA) is one of the world's most heavily produced chemicals. 2.2 million tonnes are produced every year, and it’s used to make PVC pipes, epoxy resins that line food cans, food packaging and baby feeding bottles.

The insides of some food cans contain BPA. This coating allows canned food to be heated to kill off bacteria without the metal in the can contaminating the food.

Animal studies suggest BPA can have a wide range of health effects. However, it's not clear whether these animal studies are relevant to humans.

Two studies

In 2008, Professor David Melzer of the Peninsula Medical School at the University of Exeter led a research team that analysed data from the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention in the US.

They found that high BPA levels were linked to a higher risk of heart disease, diabetes and elevated liver enzymes.

Critics pointed out that, because the original study looked at so many things, something was bound to seem risky just by chance. So, the question that needed answering was whether the link between BPA and heart disease was anything more than a statistical blip.

Link to heart disease ‘confirmed’

No, says Professor Melzer. His team analysed a new set of data from the US collected in 2005-2006. Surprisingly, average BPA levels were 30% lower in the new study. Yet people with the highest BPA levels still had a significantly higher risk of heart disease.

"It is very clear that the connection is still there," says Professor Melzer. "It underlines the question mark we found between BPA and human health."

To estimate the size of the risk they found, Professor Melzer calculates that a 60-year-old man in the top third of BPA levels (over 3.5 nanograms/millilitre urinary concentration) has a 10.2% chance of having heart disease. A 60-year-old man in the lowest third of BPA levels (under 1.4 ng/mL urinary concentration) has a 7% chance of having heart disease.

"As urinary concentrations of BPA are an approximate marker of longer-term BPA exposure, we expect these figures underestimate the true effect size. We can’t say by how much, as no long-term exposure data are available," says Professor Melzer.

It's not clear why BPA levels were lower in 2005-2006 than in the earlier study. Professor Melzer notes that public awareness of possible BPA health effects may have contributed to the decline, though nobody really knows.

But, at these lower overall BPA levels, there was a trend - but no significant association - between BPA and diabetes or liver enzymes. However, when data from both years was pooled, these links were highly significant.

While the latest study shows a link between BPA and heart disease, it doesn’t prove that BPA causes heart disease. Such proof may be hard to come by, as definitive studies would mean giving people BPA to see what happens. But longitudinal studies that track people with high BPA levels over time might provide clearer answers.

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