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Butylated Hydroxyanisole vs Potassium Bromate: which is worse?

Quick answer: Potassium Bromate carries the heavier risk profile. Butylated Hydroxyanisole is in the EU and in the US; Potassium Bromate is in the EU and in the US.

PropertyButylated HydroxyanisolePotassium Bromate
EU status
US status
Risk level
Banned inJapan (banned for foods containing fats and oils)European Union, United Kingdom, Canada, China, India, Brazil, Nigeria, Peru
Restricted inEuropean Union (restricted; banned in baby food), United KingdomJapan (voluntary phase-out advised), California (listed as known carcinogen under Prop 65 since 1991)
Categoryadditiveadditive
Where it hides

What is Butylated Hydroxyanisole?

Butylated hydroxyanisole (BHA) is a synthetic phenolic antioxidant preservative derived from petroleum (see also bha entry). It is a mixture of 2-BHA and 3-BHA isomers, used to prevent oxidative rancidity in fats, oils, and fat-containing foods. Chemical formula C11H16O2.

What is Potassium Bromate?

Potassium bromate (KBrO3) is an oxidizing agent used in commercial bread baking as a flour maturing agent and dough conditioner. It strengthens gluten networks, improves dough elasticity, and produces a more uniform, light-textured baked product. It is a white crystalline powder.

Documented risks

Butylated Hydroxyanisole: IARC classifies BHA as Group 2B (possible human carcinogen) based on forestomach tumor studies in rodents at high doses. The NTP lists it as 'reasonably anticipated to be a human carcinogen.' EFSA's 2012 review found endocrine-disrupting potential. Japan banned it for food use. The FDA permits it at 0.02% of fat content. Concerns about estrogen-receptor interaction have been documented in animal studies. Contact dermatitis from cosmetic use is reported.

Potassium Bromate: Potassium bromate is classified by the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) as Group 2B — a possible human carcinogen — based on sufficient evidence in animals. This classification was formalized in 1999. The landmark toxicology study is Kurokawa et al. (1990), published in Environmental Health Perspectives (PMC1567851), which demonstrated that KBrO3 induces renal cell tumors (kidney cancer), mesotheliomas of the peritoneum, and follicular cell tumors of the thyroid in rats. Importantly, the researchers demonstrated KBrO3 is a complete carcinogen — it possesses both tumor-initiating and tumor-promoting activities for renal tumorigenesis. The mechanism of carcinogenicity involves generation of reactive oxygen species, particularly hydroxyl radicals and superoxide radicals. These radicals cause oxidative DNA damage, specifically 8-hydroxydeoxyguanosine (8-OHdG) formation in rat kidney cells — a well-characterized biomarker of oxidative DNA damage. California declared potassium bromate a known carcinogen under Proposition 65 in 1991, requiring cancer warning labels on California products containing it. Multiple advocacy organizations including CSPI (1999 petition) and EWG (2015 petition) have petitioned the FDA for a federal ban. As of 2025, the FDA has urged voluntary industry elimination since the early 1990s but has not issued a formal ban. Nephrotoxicity from high-dose potassium bromate is well documented in case reports of accidental or intentional poisonings: it causes irreversible renal tubular necrosis, permanent deafness (cochlear damage), and blindness (optic nerve damage). These effects occur at doses far above food consumption scenarios but demonstrate the compound's acute toxicological potency. FDA testing in 1999 found residual potassium bromate above expert-recommended safe limits in more than half of 17 tested bread and roll products, demonstrating that the 'it bakes off completely' argument does not always hold in commercial practice.

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