Affiliation:
1. Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Maharshi Dayanand University, Rohtak -124001, Haryana, India
Abstract
Endocrine disruptors (EDs) disrupt the standard operation of the endocrine systems,
resulting in untoward effects. EDs have gained extensive consideration due to their severe adverse
impacts on public and wildlife health. A variety of compounds from both natural and synthetic origin
may cause endocrine disruptions. These may be found in industrial chemicals, persistent organic
pollutants, and products of regular use including pharmaceuticals, medical equipment, implants,
medical/surgical and dental devices, cosmetics, food products, other consumer goods, their packaging
and processing materials. Apart from direct consumption or use, these chemicals may impact by
entering our food chain or ecosystem. These chemicals act by mimicking the hormones or blocking
their receptors or interfering in their normal production, absorption, distribution, metabolism and
excretion. The implementation of a regulatory framework on the complex multidisciplinary field of
EDs brings enormous challenges, which pose barriers to the regulatory process. This study aims to
focus on the key public and ecological health concerns presented by EDs, challenges faced by
regulators to achieve successful regulatory proposition and the importance of collaboration endeavours
to potentially conquer such challenges. Endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs) or EDs can impact at
low exposure levels, bringing about a broad range of health issues including disorders related to
reproductive, fetal development, neurological, immunological, metabolic and cancer, etc. They may
cause health effects across generations. The regulatory frameworks available across major regulators
are tackling the identification of EDs and their mechanisms to provide necessary guidance on the
safety and disposal of such substances. However, the challenges faced outweigh the regulatory
mechanisms in place. The major challenges are related to structural ranges at times leading to no
representative structures, active metabolites, substantiate quantum, delayed effects, epigenetic changes,
widespread existence, concentration correlation for different biological species, availability of
appropriate methods, exposure to a mixture of chemicals, complex endocrinology principles, unknown
sources, routes and mechanisms, impacts at early stages of life, geographical movement of EDs,
hazard-based vs. risk-based approaches. Regulators of healthcare and environmentalists needs to
collaborate amongst them and with wider stakeholders including industry sponsors to find ways of
dealing with such challenges and capitalize on the research-based knowledge grid available across
institutions. Existence of EDs, their impact on living beings and mechanism of influence are like a
tangled web, which induces difficulties in regulating them with conventional mindset. Conquering
these challenges necessitates that regulators should join forces amongst themselves, with other institutions
operating for environment, with industry sponsors and researchers to achieve success in public
health safety.
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.
Subject
Immunology and Allergy,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism