The U.S.
National Institutes of Health report that BHA is reasonably anticipated to be a human
carcinogen based on evidence of carcinogenicity in experimental animals. In particular, when administered in high doses as part of their diet, BHA causes
papillomas and
squamous cell carcinomas of the forestomach in rats and Syrian golden
hamsters. In mice, there is no carcinogenic effect; The European Commission has conducted an evaluation of literature. They noted the lack of potential for the compound to induce carcinogenic effects in humans; studies showing carcinogenic effects in hamsters are not relevant to humans (which lack a forestomach). Also noted is that endocrine disruption, if any, is only likely to be present at levels vastly exceeding the intake as a food. The
International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) – Summaries & Evaluations stated butylated hydroxyanisole was tested for carcinogenicity in two experiments in rats and in two experiments in hamsters by administration in the diet, inducing benign and malignant tumours of the forestomach. One of its metabolites is
TBHQ (
t-butylhydroquinone). == See also ==