Bassin Article Published

FAN Bulletin #551

April 5, 2000

Dear All,
No longer can the spinners at the ADA claim that Bassin’s thesis can be ignored because it has not been peer-reviewed or published. Today it was published in the journal Cancer Causes and Control.
Below we have printed FAN’s and EWG’s media releases.
Paul Connett
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Fluoride Action Network media release
April 5, 2006

for immediate release-

Fluoridation linked to bone cancer:
Finding prompts calls to halt practice

Young boys who drink fluoridated water are at an increased risk of developing bone cancer, according to a new study published in the May issue of the journal, Cancer Causes and Control.

A team of Harvard University scientists, led by Dr. Elise Bassin, found a five fold increased risk of developing osteosarcoma in teenage boys who drank fluoridated water at ages 6, 7, and 8. The research, funded by the National Institute of Environmental Health Studies, reinforces previous findings in both animals and humans. Dr. William Mass, the head of oral health at the Centers for Disease Control, told the Wall Street Journal (July 23, 2005) that Bassin “did great shoe-leather epidemiology” (1)
According to Fluoride Action Network (FAN) Executive Director, Dr. Paul Connett, “Increasing a child’s risk of contracting a frequently fatal bone cancer is too high a price to pay for a small reduction in tooth decay. The 60-year old gamble that ingested fluoride could protect the tooth enamel without damaging other tissues, has clearly been a bad one.”

The new study is an extension of an analysis first completed by Bassin as a Harvard PhD thesis in 2001. However, the thesis adviser, Dr. Chester Douglass, was charged in 2005 by the Environmental Working Group of withholding and misrepresenting these findings to the public and scientific community (2). These charges have been “under investigation” by Harvard for almost nine months, but no report has yet been given on the results of this investigation.

Douglass has recently praised Bassin’s work saying “She did a good job Š it’s a nice analysis” in an interview with Fox TV (Boston) News (3).
According to FAN science research director Chris Neurath, “Bassin’s approach of investigating the risk of osteosarcoma as a function of the year in which the child is exposed is a breakthrough in understanding how fluoride may cause bone cancer. Bassin points out that if studies which only look at lifetime fluoride exposure or accumulated bone fluoride levels are re-examined with her method, they too may reveal the same relationship.”

This week, the director of a major British cancer study center reported finding age-specific risk factors at play in many forms of teenage cancers, including osteosarcoma (4). Dr. Jillian Birch, head of the UK Pediatric and Familial Cancer Research Group, said that childhood growth spurts and hormone variations with age seem to trigger cancers that appear in the teenage years, thus corroborating Bassin’s research.

According to FAN director Connett: “The Bassin findings deal another serious blow to the US fluoridation program. This paper comes just two weeks after a major National Research Council report on fluoride in drinking water which also raised serious health questions about the dangers of fluoride exposure. We stand firmly behind the recent call by eleven EPA professional unions for an immediate halt to water fluoridation and a full Congressional investigation of this outdated and risky program.”

-END-

References:

1. http://www.fluoridealert.org/news/2323.html

2. http://ewg.org/issues/fluoride/20050627/index.php

3. http://fluoridealert.org/fox-transcript.html

4. http://tinyurl.com/pur3n

Contact:
Paul Connett, PhD, 315-379-9200; 802-355-0999; info@fluoridealert.org
For further background information, see: http://www.fluoridealert.org

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ENVIRONMENTAL WORKING GROUP (www.ewg.org>)
For Immediate Release: April 05, 2006
Contact: EWG Public Affairs, (202) 667-6982

Harvard Study:
Strong Link Between Fluoridated Water and Bone Cancer in Boys

Department Chair With Industry Ties Misrepresented Results to Federal Authorities

(WASHINGTON, April 5) - Boys who drink water with levels of fluoride considered safe by federal guidelines are five times more likely to have a rare bone cancer than boys who drink unfluoridated water, according to a study by Harvard University scientists published in a peer-reviewed journal.

The study, led by Dr. Elise Bassin and published online today in Cancer Causes and Control, the official journal of the Harvard Center for Cancer Prevention, found a strong link between fluoridated drinking water and osteocarcoma, a rare and often fatal bone cancer, in boys. The study confirms studies by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the New Jersey health department that also found increased rates of bone cancer in boys who drank fluoridated tap water.

Bassin’s study comes on the heels of a National Academy of Sciences (NAS) report that found the federal “safe” limit for fluoride in tap water did not protect children from dental fluorosis or increased bone fractures. The NAS recommended that the allowable limit for fluoride in tap water be lowered immediately.

“This study raises very serious concerns about fluoride’s safety and its potential to cause bone cancer in teenage boys,” said Richard Wiles, EWG’s senior vice president. “The findings raise fundamental questions about the wisdom of adding fluoride to tap water.”

The Bassin study is also at the center of a joint federal and Harvard ethics investigation into whether Dr. Chester Douglass-the chairman of Oral Health Policy and epidemiology at Harvard Dental School and Bassin’s doctoral thesis advisor-lied about the results of her work when reporting the results of his federally funded research to the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS).

Last year, Environmental Working Group (EWG) obtained documents strongly suggesting that Douglass may have misrepresented Bassin’s findings. Douglass has received large federal grants to study the relationship between fluoridated drinking water and bone cancer, and is on the payroll of Colgate, the toothpaste giant, where he has edited their dentists’ newsletter for more than a decade.

When pressed recently by an investigative reporter from Fox News in Boston as to the quality of Bassin’s findings, Douglass had nothing but praise for the work. “She did a good job. She had a good group of people advising her. And it’s a nice-it’s a nice analysis. There’s nothing wrong with that analysis,” he said.

“It’s nice to see that Dr. Douglass has finally come clean on the quality of Dr. Bassin’s work. It’s just a shame that he was not so forthcoming when reporting on his work to the NIH,” Wiles said.

Fox filmed Dr. Douglass waving a draft copy of Harvard’s investigation of his conduct, and saying the university’s report will be coming out soon. Last year, EWG asked the NIEHS, which funded Douglass’ research, to investigate whether he misrepresented his findings.

EWG urges communities not to add fluoride to tap water, and advises parents to avoid fluoridated water for their children, particularly bottle fed infants. “Fluoride is fine in toothpaste, where it is directly applied to the teeth, but provides almost no dental benefit in water, while presenting serious health risks, particularly for boys,” Wiles said.

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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. The group’s work on fluoride is available at http://www.ewg.org/issues/siteindex/issues.php?issueid=5031.