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Journal ArticleDOI

Concentrations of parabens in human breast tumours

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TLDR
Initial studies reported here show that parabens can be extracted from human breast tissue and detected by thin‐layer chromatography and this should open the way technically for more detailed information to be obtained on body burdens of paraben and in particular whether body burdens are different in cancer from those in normal tissues.
Abstract
Parabens are used as preservatives in many thousands of cosmetic, food and pharmaceutical products to which the human population is exposed. Although recent reports of the oestrogenic properties of parabens have challenged current concepts of their toxicity in these consumer products, the question remains as to whether any of the parabens can accumulate intact in the body from the long-term, low-dose levels to which humans are exposed. Initial studies reported here show that parabens can be extracted from human breast tissue and detected by thin-layer chromatography. More detailed studies enabled identification and measurement of mean concentrations of individual parabens in samples of 20 human breast tumours by high-pressure liquid chromatography followed by tandem mass spectrometry. The mean concentration of parabens in these 20 human breast tumours was found to be 20.6 +/- 4.2 ng x g(-1) tissue. Comparison of individual parabens showed that methylparaben was present at the highest level (with a mean value of 12.8 +/- 2.2 ng x g(-1) tissue) and represents 62% of the total paraben recovered in the extractions. These studies demonstrate that parabens can be found intact in the human breast and this should open the way technically for more detailed information to be obtained on body burdens of parabens and in particular whether body burdens are different in cancer from those in normal tissues.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Safety assessment of esters of p-hydroxybenzoic acid (parabens)

TL;DR: The possible estrogenic hazard of parabens on the basis of the available studies is equivocal, and fails to consider the metabolism and elimination rates ofParabens, which are dose, route, and species dependent.
Journal ArticleDOI

Paraben esters: review of recent studies of endocrine toxicity, absorption, esterase and human exposure, and discussion of potential human health risks.

TL;DR: There is a need to carry out detailed evaluation of the potential for parabens, together with other oestrogenic and genotoxic co‐formulants of bodycare cosmetics, to increase female breast cancer incidence, to interfere with male reproductive functions and to influence development of malignant melanoma.
Journal ArticleDOI

Adding Molecules to Food, Pros and Cons: A Review on Synthetic and Natural Food Additives

TL;DR: The most important preservatives, nutritional additives, coloring, flavoring, texturizing, and miscellaneous agents are analyzed in terms of safety and toxicity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Parabens. From environmental studies to human health.

TL;DR: This paper provides holistic overview of paraben usage, occurrence in the environment, methods of their degradation and removal from aqueous solution, as well as hazards related to their endocrine disrupting potential and possible involvement in carcinogenesis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Endocrine disrupting chemicals in indoor and outdoor air.

TL;DR: This paper summarizes reported indoor and outdoor air concentrations, chemical use and sources, and toxicity data for each of these chemical classes.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Estrogen Receptor Relative Binding Affinities of 188 Natural and Xenochemicals: Structural Diversity of Ligands

TL;DR: The current study provides the most structurally diverse ER RBA data set with the widest range of RBA values published to date.
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Some Alkyl Hydroxy Benzoate Preservatives (Parabens) Are Estrogenic

TL;DR: Findings from in vitro and in vivo studies which confirm that a range of alkyl hydroxy benzoate preservatives (parabens) are weakly estrogenic are reported, suggesting that the safety in use of these chemicals should be reassessed.
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Identification of phthalate esters in the serum of young Puerto Rican girls with premature breast development.

TL;DR: A possible association between plasticizers with known estrogenic and antiandrogenic activity and the cause of premature breast development in a human female population is suggested.
Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: An overall picture of how xenoestrogens structurally resemble endogenous 17beta-estradiol and the synthetic estrogen diethylstilbestrol is provided, which is rationalized into a set of hierarchical rules that will be useful in guidance for identification of potential estrogens.
Journal ArticleDOI

Estrogenic Activities of 517 Chemicals by Yeast Two-Hybrid Assay

TL;DR: A simple and rapid screening method using the yeast two-hybrid system based on the ligand-dependent interaction of nuclear hormone receptors with coactivators to test the estrogenic activity of chemicals.
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