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Environment & exposome

Endocrine disruptors (BPA, phthalates)

DEEndokrine Disruptoren (BPA, Phthalate)

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Endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs) are exogenous substances that interfere with hormone synthesis, transport, receptor binding or metabolism; bisphenol A (BPA) and its structural analogues (BPS, BPF) act primarily as agonists or antagonists at oestrogen receptors (ERα, ERβ) and also interact with androgen and thyroid hormone pathways, while phthalates — plasticisers used widely in food packaging, medical devices and personal-care products — reduce androgen biosynthesis by inhibiting steroidogenic enzymes. Epidemiological associations include earlier puberty onset, reduced sperm quality, polycystic ovary syndrome, type 2 diabetes and obesity, though establishing causality in observational data is complicated by ubiquitous co-exposure and the non-monotonic dose-response curves characteristic of many EDCs. The EU has banned BPA from polycarbonate baby bottles (2011) and is progressively restricting it from other food-contact materials under ongoing regulatory action, and applies a group tolerable daily intake for phthalates, but regulatory thresholds remain contested; cumulative mixture risk assessment is not yet standard practice in most jurisdictions.

Sources

  1. Gore AC, Chappell VA, Fenton SE, Flaws JA, Nadal A, Prins GS, Toppari J, Zoeller RT. (2015). EDC-2: The Endocrine Society's Second Scientific Statement on Endocrine-Disrupting Chemicals. *Endocrine Reviews*doi:10.1210/er.2015-1010