New Science on Fluoride & Bone Cancer Environmental
Working Group Press Release
www.ewg.org
June 6, 2005
Government Asked to Evaluate the Cancer-Causing
Potential Of Fluoride in Tap Water
EWG Cites Compelling Body of Science Linking Fluoride to
Rare Bone Cancer in Boys
WASHINGTON — Citing a strong body of peer-reviewed evidence,
Environmental Working Group (EWG) today asked the National
Toxicology Program (NTP) of the National Institutes of Health
(NIH) to list fluoride in tap water in its authoritative
Report on carcinogens, based on its ability to cause a rare
form of childhood bone cancer, osteosarcoma, in boys. The
Report on Carcinogens lists only substances that are known or
reasonably anticipated to cause cancer in humans.
In recent years, concerns have grown about the safety of
fluoride in tap water. In 2002, the Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) commissioned a study by the National Research
Council (NRC) on the overall safety of fluoride in tap water.
The final report is expected by February 2006. The NRC,
however, does not have the expertise or the mandate to
determine the carcinogenicity of fluoride.
EWG recognizes the value of fluoride to dentistry, yet a
substantial and growing body of peer-reviewed science strongly
suggests that adding fluoride to tap water is not the safest
way to achieve the dental health benefits of fluoridation.
Nationwide about 170 million people live in communities with
fluoridated water. Adding fluoride to tap water can be a
contentious issue. There are ongoing fights over fluoridation
in Colorado, New Jersey, Oregon, Vermont, Washington,
California, Massachusetts and Nebraska. States with recent
battles over fluoridation include New Hampshire, Virginia,
Florida, Arkansas and Tennessee.
Research dating back decades, much of it government funded,
has long suggested that fluoride added to drinking water
presents a unique cancer risk to the growing bones of young
boys. New epidemiology provides strong evidence of a link
between exposure to fluoride in tap water during the
mid-childhood growth spurt between ages 6 and 10, and bone
cancer in adolescence. Additional science strongly suggests
that fluoride can cause genetic mutations in bone cells
directly related to childhood bone cancer.
"We recognize the potential benefits of fluoride to dental
health, but there is very compelling evidence that fluoride in
tap water can cause bone cancer in boys," said EWG Senior Vice
President Richard Wiles. "The government needs to assess the
overall strength of the evidence and make a determination of
fluoride's cancer-causing potential," Wiles added.
EWG's letter to the NTP and related materials can be found at
www.ewg.org/issues/fluoride/20050606/index.php
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Environmental Working Group is a nonprofit research
organization based in Washington, D.C., that uses the power of
information to protect human health and the environment.
New Harvard Doctoral Thesis Supports
Fluoride-bone Cancer Link
Environmental Working Group (EWG) has attached to this
petition, key portions of a doctoral dissertation from the
Harvard School of Dental Medicine that found a strong,
statistically significant relationship between fluoride in tap
water at levels commonly found in American water supplies, and
the rare but often fatal form of bone cancer, osteosarcoma, in
boys. The association is particularly strong when exposure
occurs during periods of rapid bone growth that take place
between ages five and ten. The findings confirm the results of
earlier studies by the U.S. Public Health Service and the New
Jersey Department of Health that found an association between
fluoride in tap water and bone cancer in males under age 20.
The dissertation by Elise Bassin is titled "Association
between fluoride in drinking water during growth and
development and the incidence of osteosarcoma for children and
adolescents." Bassin was awarded a doctorate by the
Harvard School of Dental Medicine in 2001. The research
findings from her doctoral dissertation, however, have not yet
been published.
The study came to the attention of EWG as a result of a failed
attempt to obtain the full doctoral thesis by the staff of the
National Research Council committee on fluoride safety. After
being repeatedly denied a copy of the thesis, the NRC
committee instead sent a committee member to the Harvard
Countway Library of Medicine to read the entire document and
report back to the committee. Environmental Working Group
obtained a copy of the results section of the document from
the Fluoride Action Network, who sent two researchers to the
library, each of whom were allowed to copy 10 percent of the
document.
Dr. Bassin's study measured the risk of osteosarcoma before
age 20 based on exposures to fluoride in drinking water during
each year of age in childhood. The methodology employed is
rigorous and fluoride levels in tap water for each study
participant were confirmed for each year of exposure during
childhood. The analysis shows significantly elevated risks of
bone cancer in boys exposed to fluoridated water during a
window of vulnerability, from ages five through ten, with a
peak risk associated with exposures at seven years of age.
Elevated bone cancer risks were identified by Bassin at
fluoride levels that are commonly found in American water
supplies. For drinking water systems with fluoride levels from
30 to 99 percent of the amount recommended by the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Bassin reports elevated
risks for exposure from ages five through ten, with a
five-fold risk of osteosarcoma for those exposed at age seven
(4.94 (1.23-19.8) at 95% CI)). At 100 percent or more of the
recommended level (and still far below legal maximum levels),
the risk for exposure at seven years old rises to 7.2-fold
(1.73-30.0) at the 95% CI (Bassin 2001, pg 95 — see results
section attached).
The CDC's recommended fluoride levels are well below what is
legally allowed in tap water. The EPA's maximum contaminant
limit, or MCL, for fluoride in tap water is 4 parts per
million. The CDC recommends optimal fluoride levels ranging
from 0.7-1.2 parts per million based on average annual air
temperatures and corresponding water consumption rates.
Notably, Bassin's doctoral dissertation was based on a
reanalysis of data from another study that found no
association between drinking water fluoride levels and bone
cancer, co-authored by Harvard Department Chair Dr. Chester
Douglass (McGuire 1995). In her reanalysis, Bassin examined
the same cases and controls used by Douglass in 1995. Dr.
Bassin, however, refined the analysis by limiting cases to
individuals exposed at less than 20 years old and conducted a
more detailed analysis of fluoride exposure and age-specific
effects. The result was a very strong correlation between
fluoride exposure and bone cancer, particularly for boys
exposed at ages 6 through 8.
Provided by NY State Coalition Opposed to Fluoridation
www.orgsites.com/ny/nyscof