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Fluoride Concerns Surface Once Again:
Research linking fluoride in drinking water to health problems
could lead to regulatory changes
August 25, 2003, Volume 81, Number
34
Bette Hileman
Chemical and Engineering News
Despite decades of adding fluoride to
drinking water to protect teeth from decay, there are growing
concerns about the efficacy and the safety of this practice.
Spurred by new research on fluoride's health effects and
at the request of the Environmental Protection Agency, the
National Academies' National Research Council (NRC) has
begun another review of the problems of water fluoridation.
On Aug. 12, NRC held a public meeting
to review EPA's standards for fluoride in drinking water.
Several witnesses defended the current standards and the
practice of adding fluoride to drinking water to protect
teeth. But some argued that the maximum contaminant level
(MCL) of 4 mg of fluoride per liter allowed by EPA in drinking
water presents health risks to the population and provides
little, if any, benefit to teeth. They claimed, in particular,
that EPA's MCL presents risks to bones and other organ systems.
In 1986, EPA set an MCL of 4 mg per L
and a secondary MCL of 2 mg per L for fluoride in drinking
water. A secondary standard is a goal that water systems
should try to reach, but they cannot be fined if they fail
to do so. In 1993, the NRC Board on Environmental Studies
& Toxicology reviewed those standards and found them
acceptable. Last year, EPA asked NRC to once again review
the toxicological and exposure data on fluoride, especially
new research, and determine whether the standards can still
be considered acceptable for protecting the public from
potential adverse effects of fluoride.
In its 1993 review, the NRC panel found
inconsistencies in the fluoride database and gaps in knowledge.
It recommended further research on fluoride intake, dental
fluorosis (mottling of the teeth caused by excessive fluoride
intake during tooth development), bone fractures related
to fluoride accumulation, and carcinogenicity. It also advised
that EPA's standards be reviewed when results of new research
became available. Since 1993, many studies have been published
on fluoride's effects on the nervous system and bone.
THE FORMAL CHARGE for the new NRC review
is to examine the toxicological, epidemiological, clinical,
and exposure data published on fluoride since 1993. At the
recent public meeting held by NRC, Joyce M. Donohue, toxicologist
in EPA's Office of Water, pointed out that the enforceable
MCL of 4 mg per L was set to protect against crippling skeletal
fluorosis, while the nonenforceable secondary MCL for fluoride
was set at 2 mg per L to prevent dental fluorosis. "At
2 mg per L, the incidence of moderate dental fluorosis ranges
from 0 to 15%," she said, "and there are distinct
increases in severe dental fluorosis at levels above 2.5
mg per L." Teeth with severe fluorosis are heavily
stained and pitted and susceptible to fracture, those with
mild fluorosis have white opaque patches on small areas
of the teeth, and those with moderate fluorosis have yellow
or tan stains.
Donohue explained that if people consume
a minimum of 20 mg of fluoride per day for 20 years, they
can contract crippling skeletal fluorosis. To calculate
the MCL, she said, 20 mg per day was divided by the average
water intake of 2 L per day to get 10 mg per L, and this
figure was divided by a safety factor of 2.5 to yield 4
mg per L. "I do not know the origin of the 2.5 safety
factor. Now, EPA uses safety factors of 1, 3, and 10, not
2.5," she said. Safety factors establish a margin of
safety to account for individual variability and species
differences when extrapolating from animal to human data.
In calculating the fluoride standards,
Donohue explained, EPA assumed that all fluoride exposure
comes from drinking water, when in fact it also originates
from food processed with fluoridated water, personal care
products, food fertilized or treated with fluoride compounds,
and supplements. "In setting standards for all other
drinking water contaminants except barium, EPA has considered
exposure from many different sources, not just water,"
she said.
Since the NRC review in 1993, research
indicates that over the past decade people have had greater
exposure to fluoride through personal care products and
that the prevalence of dental fluorosis may have increased,
Donohue said. Also, studies have raised questions about
whether topical exposure to fluoride may prove much more
important than systemic exposure in preventing dental caries,
she said. (If the primary action of fluoride is topical,
drinking fluoridated water would probably not be as important
as fluoridated toothpaste in preventing tooth decay.) In
addition, new research suggests that low levels of fluoride
have developmental effects and effects on the brain, she
said.
Although the NRC panel's formal charge
does not include an examination of the benefits of fluoride,
William R. Maas, director of the division of oral health
at the Centers for Disease Control & Prevention, spoke
for nearly an hour, defending water fluoridation. He attributed
the sharp decline in dental caries experienced in the U.S.
since the late 1940s to fluoridation and called it "an
important public health achievement." In the U.S.,
162 million people, or about 55% of the population, are
drinking fluoridated water, yet only 1.3% of school children
experience moderate or severe dental fluorosis, he said.
Altogether, 22% of children have some degree of fluorosis,
he explained.
Twelve-year-old children who have lived
in areas with fluoridated drinking water all their lives
have on average 1.6 fewer cavities than children with no
exposure to fluoridation, Maas said. Put another way, 12-year-old
children in fluoridated areas have an average of 4.25 decayed,
missing, or filled tooth surfaces out of a total of 128
surfaces, while 12-year-old children in fluoridated areas
have 2.81 cavities out of a possible 128. This represents
a 39% reduction in decay from fluoridation, he said.
Paul Connett, a chemistry professor at
St. Lawrence University, called the 39% reduction a vagary
of comparing small numbers--a difference that may not be
statistically significant. Connett noted that few countries
in Western Europe fluoridate their drinking water. Overall,
only 1 to 2% of Europe's population drinks fluoridated water,
yet all European Union nations have experienced tooth decay
reductions similar to those in the U.S. over the past 50
years. Therefore, it is illogical to attribute the decline
in tooth decay in the U.S. to fluoridation, he said.
CONNETT ARGUED that EPA's MCL of 4 mg
per L, or 4 ppm, puts people at risk for skeletal fluorosis.
There are four stages of the disease, he said, and the standard
is designed to prevent only the most severe stage. The first
three stages are indistinguishable from arthritis unless
a doctor performs a bone biopsy to determine the fluoride
content.
"Drinking water with a 4-ppm fluoride
content for 20 years yields bone fluoride levels of more
than 6,000 ppm," Connett said. People with clinical
phase I of skeletal fluorosis have been reported to have
bone fluoride contents of 6,000 to 7,000 ppm, he explained.
Therefore, "many people who drink water that meets
the EPA standard may have some degree of skeletal fluorosis,"
he said. Those who drink more than the average of 2 L per
day would be at particular risk, he said.
Connett said it is likely that many people
who live in communities with moderate fluoride content in
their water supplies (about 1 ppm, for example) experience
preclinical skeletal fluorosis. Some individuals who have
lived all their lives in areas with 1 ppm fluoride in the
water supply have been found to have elevated levels of
fluoride in their bone ash, he explained.
There is evidence from both human and
animal studies that cortical bone with excessive levels
of fluoride is more brittle and prone to fracture, Connett
said. With the exception of vertebrae, most bones in the
body are primarily cortical, including the femoral neck
in the hip. Consequently, people who accumulate excessive
levels of fluoride in their bones are probably more likely
to experience a hip fracture, he said.
In 11 clinical trials over the past decade,
people were given fluoride tablets (20 to 34 mg per day
over 1 to 4 years) to treat osteoporosis, Connett said.
The effects were the opposite of what researchers expected.
In all of these studies, the group of patients who received
the tablets had higher hip fracture rates than the control
group patients, who were given a placebo.
"Many people will experience cumulative
fluoride doses over their lifetimes from fluoridated water
which exceed the cumulative doses that have caused increased
hip fractures in clinical trials," he said. "For
humans, exposure to 4 ppm fluoride in drinking water yields
an average of 6,400 ppm fluoride in bone," and several
clinical trials showed increased fracture rates when the
bone concentration is as low as 3,800 ppm, he explained.
There is also new evidence that fluoride
can have neurotoxic effects, Connett said. Phyllis J. Mullenix,
then a toxicologist at the Forsyth Research Institute in
Boston, examined the effect of sodium fluoride on rat behavior.
In utero fluoride exposure caused hyperactivity in the rats,
and those dosed after birth were hypoactive.
In another study, one group of rats drank
water containing 1 ppm sodium fluoride, a second group drank
water with 1 ppm aluminum fluoride, and a control group
drank distilled water. In both treated groups, but not in
the control group, the brains developed the type of b-amyloid
deposits associated with senile dementia in humans, Connett
said.
NRC's review of fluoride has broader ramifications
than the fluoridation of water. It may influence EPA's decisions
on the insecticide sulfuryl fluoride (SO2F2), a substitute
for stratospheric-ozone-depleting methyl bromide. EPA is
now in the process of deciding whether the temporary tolerance
it granted for the postharvest fumigation of food with SO2F2
should be made permanent. SO2F2 leaves residues on walnuts
and raisins that are metabolized to inorganic fluoride.
Because the NRC committee has just commenced
its review of fluoride, it has not yet drawn any conclusions
from the deliberations. It will hold another public meeting
in November and plans to complete its review by November
2004
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