Overwhelming Scientific Evidence Confirms Safety of Aspartame
The Calorie Control Council today stated that a rat study conducted by
Italy's Ramazzini Institute is totally contradictory with the extensive
scientific research and regulatory reviews conducted on aspartame. The U.S. Food
& Drug Administration (FDA) has said they are not recommending any changes
in the use of aspartame. The study, to be published in Environmental Health
Perspectives, a publication of the National Institute of Environmental and
Health Sciences (NIEHS), alleges that aspartame may be related to an increased
risk of leukemia and lymphoma in rats. The design and execution of the study did
not follow guidelines set up by the National Toxicology Program (NTP), the U.S.
government toxicology initiative administered by the NIEHS.
In October 2005, NIEHS informed the Calorie Control Council, "The NTP has
convened a group of pathologists to review selected histopathological lesions
from the RF [Ramazzini Foundation] aspartame cancer bioassays. The NIEHS has not
carried out a systematic pathology review of the RF aspartame studies." NIEHS
has confirmed that it had no role in the design, performance or interpretation
of the Ramazzini study and stated it is not putting NIEHS' reputation behind
this study.
Ramazzini researchers did not follow internationally established protocols
for evaluation of animal carcinogenicity study findings. Further, the NTP and
other organizations have established guidelines for pathology peer review in
order to provide scientific consensus that study conclusions are valid. Such an
independent review of the pathology slides from this study has not been
conducted.
NTP has recently completed three animal studies designed to evaluate whether
aspartame is capable of causing cancer. These U.S. government funded and managed
studies were conducted using Good Laboratory Practice (GLP) and the results were
peer-reviewed by individuals considered experts in their profession. The results
of these cancer studies, in which aspartame was fed at levels similar to those
reportedly fed in the Ramazzini study, unequivocally indicated that "there was
no evidence of carcinogenic activity [cancer] of aspartame."
Previous findings by the Ramazzini researchers at the same institution using
a similar protocol have been reviewed by the FDA's Cancer Assessment Committee,
which noted that those reported data were "unreliable" due to a "lack of
critical details . and . questionable histopathological conclusions. ." The
aspartame findings from the Ramazzini researchers recently were reviewed by the
expert United Kingdom Committee on Carcinogenicity of Chemicals in Food,
Consumer Products and the Environment. Members of that Committee characterized
aspects of study findings as "implausible," with other aspects "cast(ing) doubt"
on the entire study. Members of the committee were "critical" of the study
design and the statistical approach used.
Four long-term carcinogenicity studies on aspartame conducted in accordance
with international standards have found no relationship between aspartame and
any form of cancer. The studies were submitted to numerous regulatory agencies,
such as the FDA, which conducted exhaustive reviews of the data. When FDA
approved aspartame, the FDA Commissioner noted: "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."
Based on the current information from Ramazzini, the European Food Safety
Authority (EFSA) (a scientific body charged with providing independent and
objective advice on food safety issues in the European Union) stated, "EFSA does
not consider it appropriate to suggest any change in consumers' diets relative
to aspartame. ." All of the approved low-calorie sweeteners, including
aspartame, have been determined to be safe by the FDA and other scientific and
regulatory authorities worldwide. Aspartame has been safely consumed for nearly
a quarter of a century and is one of the most thoroughly studied food
ingredients, with more than 200 scientific studies confirming its safety. In
addition to the FDA, the Joint Expert Committee on Food Additives (JECFA) of the
World Health Organization and Food and Agriculture Organization, the Scientific
Committee on Food of the European Union and regulatory agencies in 130 countries
have reviewed aspartame and found it to be safe for use.
Aspartame is composed of two amino acids, aspartic acid and phenylalanine, as
the methyl ester. Amino acids are the building blocks of protein. Aspartic acid
and phenylalanine are found naturally in protein containing foods, including
meats, grains and dairy products. Methyl esters are also found naturally in many
foods such as fruits and vegetable and their juices. The body handles the
components from aspartame in the same way it handles them when derived from
other foods.
"Consumers and health professionals can be assured that aspartame is safe for
humans. And the rigorous scrutiny and battery of studies to which aspartame has
been subjected should provide people with additional confidence in its safety,"
stated Lyn Nabors, President of the Calorie Control Council.
For more information please visit http://www.aspartame.org.
The Calorie Control Council, established in 1966, is an international
non-profit association representing the lowcalorie and reduced-fat food and
beverage industry.
17-Nov-2005