Toxic ‘forever chemicals’ linked to childhood leukemia, research suggests

Toxic ‘forever chemicals’ linked to childhood leukemia, research suggests

The group of fluorine-basedchemicalsknown now as “forever chemicals” have come to beextremely widely usedsince their discovery in the mid-20th century. From greaseprooffoodwrappers and non-stick cookware, to dental floss,mascaraand firefighting foam, they have been used in huge quantities for decades.

The Independent US

Their popularity is due to their seemingly miraculous properties – they can repel water and oil, resist high temperatures and offer incredible durability.

However, they do not degrade easily, with some compounds expected to last hundreds or thousands of years, and they canleach into drinking water, contaminate food and eventually accumulate in the human body and in animals.

They have already beenlinked to cancers, cardiovascular disease, dementia and infertility.

New research by a team at the University of California has found that early exposure to these chemicals, also known asPFAS(per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances), was associated with a higher risk of acute lymphoblastic leukaemia, the most common childhood cancer.

To investigate the effects of exposure on babies andchildren, the researchers analysed dried blood spots collected from newborns in Los Angeles County over a 15-year timespan to get a clearer picture of the effects of early exposure to these pervasive chemicals.

The study included 125 children who had been diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia as well as 219 children without cancer, born between 2000 and 2015.

Contaminated drinking water is a primary source of the forever chemicals found in humans, along with food consumed from grease-resistant packaging and from other household products (Getty)

Among 17 PFAS detected in the newborn blood, two kinds – PFOA and PFOS – showed up at the highest levels. A primary source of PFOA is indrinking water, but it is also used in food packaging and waterproof fabrics, and was used in Teflon cookware until recently. PFOS is also used for similar applications, as well as being found in synthetic clothing and carpets.

The study found that the children with higher levels of PFAS detected in their blood had increased odds of developing leukaemia, the team said, though they cautioned that “estimates were not precise”.

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“Risk also appeared to rise with combined exposure to the two chemicals,” they said.

Co-author Veronica Vieira, the chair and professor of environmental and occupationalhealthat the University of California, Irvine’s Wen Public Health school, said: “This research moves us closer to understanding what babies are exposed to from the very start by directly measuring PFAS present at birth, rather than estimating exposure from drinking water.”

She added: “By capturing exposures during a critical window of development, we are gaining a clearer picture of how environmental contaminants may contribute to childhood cancer risk.”

Non-stick saucepans which used PFAS were banned from sale in the UK in 2005 (Getty/iStock)

The research team said their study does not prove cause and effect; nonetheless, they said, “It adds to growing evidence that PFAS exposure early in life may contribute to cancer risk in children.”

In recent years, a better understanding of the risks that forever chemicals pose has led to a pushback against their usage.

The use of PFAS in Teflon cookware was outlawed in the UK in 2005, in Europe in 2008, and was stopped from being sold in the US in 2014.

Further controlsare also on the cardsin Britain, with a number of concerned MPs calling for the government to ban a group ofsynthetic chemicalsfrom being used in school uniforms, food packaging, andcookware.

In a report into the risks of PFAS, theEnvironmental Audit Committeeurged the government to introduce restrictions on the non-essential use of the chemicals and begin a phased restriction from 2027.

The research is published in theJournal of Exposure Science & Environmental Epidemiology.

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