Updated fact sheet on aspartame by FSANZ
United States Food & Drug Administration
On November 21, 1986 the Food and Drug Administration said: "The data and
information supporting the safety of aspartame are extensive. It is likely that
no food product has ever been so closely examined for safety. Moreover, the
decisions of the agency to approve aspartame for its uses have been given the
fullest airing that the legal process requires.
"Few compounds have withstood such detailed testing and repeated, close
scrutiny, and the process through which aspartame has gone should provide the
public with additional confidence of its safety."
On November 3, 1987, FDA Commissioner Frank Young presented oral testimony
before the Committee on Labor and Human Resources of the U.S. Senate. The
Commissioner's summed-up the FDA's position on aspartame with these concluding
remarks: "... In conclusion, we do not have any medical or scientific evidence
that undermines our confidence in the safety of aspartame. This confidence is
based on years of study, analysis of adverse reactions, and research in the
scientific community, including studies supported by FDA. Otherwise we would
have expected to see a significant incidence of serious adverse reactions in
view of the tens of millions of our population who consume aspartame products. A
significant number of adverse reactions have not been reported, however, despite
the enormous publicity that such alleged adverse effects have received in our
media ..."