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Xanthine (116900) and Oxypurinol (447509) Fact Sheet

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Issued: 4/99

On This Page

  1. Description of the Active Ingredient
  2. Use Sites, Target Pests, and Application Methods
  3. Assessing Risks to Human Health
  4. Assessing Risks to the Environment
  5. Regulatory Information
  6. Products Directed Against Public Public Heath Pests
  7. Producer Information
  8. Additional Contact Information

Summary

Xanthine and oxypurinol, combined in equal amounts, are used in cockroach bait stations to attract and control cockroaches in indoor environments, including homes, schools, and vehicles. Use of these bait stations is not expected to harm humans or pets.

  1. Description of the Active Ingredient
  2. The active ingredients, oxypurinol and xanthine, are formulated into a pellet that is enclosed in a bait station. Oxypurinol is a breakdown product of the human drug allopurinol, which is used to treat gout and certain blood diseases. Xanthine is a naturally occurring substance found in all living cells. Acting together, oxypurinol and xanthine interfere with metabolic processes needed for cockroach growth and reproduction. It may take six to ten weeks for numbers of cockroaches to decrease noticeably.

  3. Use Sites, Target Pests, and Application Methods
  4. Assessing Risks to Human Health
  5. No adverse human health effects are expected from use of xanthine/oxypurinol in bait stations. Based on tests with this mixture of active ingredients, there is no evidence of mammalian toxicity from amounts much greater than people, including children, would encounter from these bait stations. After considering available information, the Agency concludes that the bait station can be used safely when label precautions are followed. Because the active ingredients are enclosed in a sealed bait station, exposure is expected to be minimal.

  6. Assessing Risks to the Environment
  7. Because the bait is designed to be used indoors and the active ingredients are contained in the bait station, exposure to any species except the cockroach is unlikely. Therefore, no harmful environmental effects are expected.

  8. Regulatory Information
  9. Xanthine/oxypurinol was registered (licensed for use) in May 1999. As of May 1999, the only EPA-approved end use product with xanthine and oxypurinol as active ingredients is the cockroach bait station.

  10. Products Directed Against Public Public Heath Pests
  11. EPA defines a public health pest as any organism that can cause or transmit human disease, or can cause human discomfort or injury. Examples include cockroaches, germs, mosquitoes, ticks, and rats. To help protect the public’s health, EPA requires registrants of products used against public health pests to demonstrate that the product meets specific standards for effectiveness as well as for safety. The product currently registered with xanthine and oxypurinol as active ingredients for use against cockroaches has met the applicable standards.

  12. Producer Information
  13. Dominion BioSciences, Inc.
    Blacksburg, VA 24060

  14. Additional Contact Information
  15. Ombudsman, Biopesticides and Pollution Prevention Division (7511P)
    Office of Pesticide Programs
    Environmental Protection Agency
    1200 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
    Washington, D.C. 20460

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