Occupational (inhalation) In a 1999 report, the
World Health Organization has linked exposure to azodicarbonamide at workplaces where it is manufactured or handled in raw form to "respiratory issues, allergies and asthma". The available data are restricted to these occupational environments. Exposure of the general public to azodicarbonamide could not be evaluated because of the lack of available data. The WHO concluded, "The level of risk is uncertain; hence, exposure levels should be reduced as much as possible". In the
UK, the
Health and Safety Executive has identified azodicarbonamide as a respiratory sensitizer (a possible cause of
asthma) in workplace settings and determined that containers of it should be labeled with "May cause sensitisation by inhalation." Azodicarbonamide was added to the
REACH Regulation candidate
Substances of Very High Concern list in 2012, for its respiratory sensitizing properties.
Food (ingestion) In jurisdictions such as Australia and the
European Union, azodicarbonamide as a food additive is banned. Azodicarbonamide as a blowing agent in plastics was banned in the EU in August 2005 in plastic articles that are intended to come into direct contact with food. In the United States, azodicarbonamide is
generally recognized as safe (GRAS) and is allowed to be added to flour at levels up to 45
ppm. As of February 2014, the
Center for Science in the Public Interest stated azodicarbonamide "has been poorly tested" and advocated for reducing the amount of azodicarbonamide used in food. Banning ADA in food is motivated by studies of
semicarbazide (aminourea) - a breakdown product of ADA that shows "weak carcinogenic activity in laboratory animals", but data is inconclusive in humans. The EU banned ADA in food containers despite an EFSA report considering such exposure "not a concern" due to low levels produced. The FDA considers ADA to be safe in permissible concentrations. ==References==