Potential endocrine disrupting properties of toys for babies and infants.

Plastic toys mouthed by children may be a source of exposure to endocrine active substances. The purpose of this study was to measure hormonal activity of substances leaching from toys and to identify potential endocrine disruptors causing that activity. For this purpose, migration experiments of to...

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Main Authors: Christian Kirchnawy, Fiona Hager, Veronica Osorio Piniella, Mathias Jeschko, Michael Washüttl, Johannes Mertl, Aurelie Mathieu-Huart, Christophe Rousselle
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0231171
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spelling doaj-6f7db5b5b0ea4959be7e17e787f69a7e2021-03-03T21:41:25ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032020-01-01154e023117110.1371/journal.pone.0231171Potential endocrine disrupting properties of toys for babies and infants.Christian KirchnawyFiona HagerVeronica Osorio PiniellaMathias JeschkoMichael WashüttlJohannes MertlAurelie Mathieu-HuartChristophe RoussellePlastic toys mouthed by children may be a source of exposure to endocrine active substances. The purpose of this study was to measure hormonal activity of substances leaching from toys and to identify potential endocrine disruptors causing that activity. For this purpose, migration experiments of toys were conducted in saliva simulants. The CALUX® assays were used to detect (anti-) estrogenic and (anti-) androgenic activity of 18 toys. Chemical trace analysis-namely, GC-MS and HPLC-MS- was used to identify which compounds may be responsible for endocrine activity in the sample migrates. Nine out of 18 tested toys showed significant estrogenic activity. For two samples, the detected estrogenic activity could be well explained by detecting the known endocrine active substance bisphenol A (BPA). For all identified substances, including BPA, a risk assessment for human health was performed by comparing the exposure dose, calculated based on the determined substance concentration, to toxicological reference values. Using worst-case scenarios, the exposure to BPA by mouthing of the two estrogen active, BPA-containing toys could be above the temporary TDI that EFSA has calculated. This demonstrates that some toys could significantly contribute to the total exposure to BPA of babies and infants. For seven out of nine estrogen active samples, the source of the estrogen activity could not be explained by analysis for 41 known or suspected endocrine active substances in plastic, indicating that the estrogen activities were caused by currently unknown endocrine active substances, or by endocrine active substances that would currently not be suspected in toys.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0231171
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Christian Kirchnawy
Fiona Hager
Veronica Osorio Piniella
Mathias Jeschko
Michael Washüttl
Johannes Mertl
Aurelie Mathieu-Huart
Christophe Rousselle
spellingShingle Christian Kirchnawy
Fiona Hager
Veronica Osorio Piniella
Mathias Jeschko
Michael Washüttl
Johannes Mertl
Aurelie Mathieu-Huart
Christophe Rousselle
Potential endocrine disrupting properties of toys for babies and infants.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Christian Kirchnawy
Fiona Hager
Veronica Osorio Piniella
Mathias Jeschko
Michael Washüttl
Johannes Mertl
Aurelie Mathieu-Huart
Christophe Rousselle
author_sort Christian Kirchnawy
title Potential endocrine disrupting properties of toys for babies and infants.
title_short Potential endocrine disrupting properties of toys for babies and infants.
title_full Potential endocrine disrupting properties of toys for babies and infants.
title_fullStr Potential endocrine disrupting properties of toys for babies and infants.
title_full_unstemmed Potential endocrine disrupting properties of toys for babies and infants.
title_sort potential endocrine disrupting properties of toys for babies and infants.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Plastic toys mouthed by children may be a source of exposure to endocrine active substances. The purpose of this study was to measure hormonal activity of substances leaching from toys and to identify potential endocrine disruptors causing that activity. For this purpose, migration experiments of toys were conducted in saliva simulants. The CALUX® assays were used to detect (anti-) estrogenic and (anti-) androgenic activity of 18 toys. Chemical trace analysis-namely, GC-MS and HPLC-MS- was used to identify which compounds may be responsible for endocrine activity in the sample migrates. Nine out of 18 tested toys showed significant estrogenic activity. For two samples, the detected estrogenic activity could be well explained by detecting the known endocrine active substance bisphenol A (BPA). For all identified substances, including BPA, a risk assessment for human health was performed by comparing the exposure dose, calculated based on the determined substance concentration, to toxicological reference values. Using worst-case scenarios, the exposure to BPA by mouthing of the two estrogen active, BPA-containing toys could be above the temporary TDI that EFSA has calculated. This demonstrates that some toys could significantly contribute to the total exposure to BPA of babies and infants. For seven out of nine estrogen active samples, the source of the estrogen activity could not be explained by analysis for 41 known or suspected endocrine active substances in plastic, indicating that the estrogen activities were caused by currently unknown endocrine active substances, or by endocrine active substances that would currently not be suspected in toys.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0231171
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