Date: 17/07/2023 22:28:02
From: dv
ID: 2055313
Subject: FDA: aspartame not a likely carcinogen

No, aspartame is not a ‘possible carcinogen,’ FDA says in response to WHO ruling

The regulator’s statement came on the heels of a ruling issued by an arm of the World Health Organization (WHO), which classified the ubiquitous sweetener as possibly cancer-causing.

The WHO agency, called the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC), made its call based on a handful of studies in humans, mice and rats, as well as cell-based studies, which the agency says link aspartame to cancer. Each line of evidence was “limited,” meaning the IARC couldn’t confidently rule out the possibility that the results were skewed by “chance, bias, or confounding.” Having also reviewed the data, the FDA flagged “significant shortcomings” in the studies on which the IARC relied, according to its statement.

“Aspartame is one of the most studied food additives in the human food supply,” the FDA statement continues. “FDA scientists do not have safety concerns when aspartame is used under the approved conditions,” meaning when people adhere to the established safe consumption limit of no more than 40 milligrams of aspartame per 2.2 pounds (1 kilogram) of body weight per day. (To exceed that daily limit, a 150-pound (68 kilograms) person would need to down more than a dozen cans of diet soda.)

So what gives? What prompted the IARC to make this contentious call?

In an exclusive published two weeks ago, Reuters reported that the IARC was planning to add aspartame to its list of possible carcinogens. Now, with the publication of a new report in the journal The Lancet Oncology, the IARC has made its declaration official, and aspartame is now listed among hundreds of other possible carcinogens — which include aloe vera leaf extract, “traditional Asian” pickled vegetables and the radio-frequency electromagnetic fields associated with cellphones.

The IARC’s controversial carcinogen ranking system has long been criticized as misleading and confusing. In the case of aspartame, the IARC placed the sweetener in group 2B, the “possible” carcinogens, largely based on three observational human studies that explored potential links between cancer and drinking artificially sweetened beverages, which served as a proxy for aspartame exposure.

One study conducted in Europe linked artificially sweetened soft drinks to a heightened risk of hepatocellular carcinoma, a type of liver cancer. Two U.S. studies found a similar increase in liver cancer risk linked to artificially sweetened beverages, although one of the two only observed this effect in people with diabetes.

The IARC combined this human data with rodent studies that linked aspartame to both malignant and benign tumors in mice and rats, but they noted weaknesses in the design of the animal studies. They also noted limited evidence from lab dish studies that suggest aspartame “exhibits key characteristics of carcinogens.”

Taken altogether, the evidence of carcinogenicity isn’t very strong.

This is the first time the IARC has evaluated aspartame, but another arm of the WHO — the Joint WHO and Food and Agriculture Organization’s Expert Committee on Food Additives, or JECFA — has evaluated the sweetener several times and set an acceptable daily intake level. JECFA reviewed the data on aspartame at the same time as the IARC and has maintained that the established intake level is safe.

Crucially, “JECFA also considered the evidence on cancer risk, in animal and human studies, and concluded that the evidence of an association between aspartame consumption and cancer in humans is not convincing,” Dr. Moez Sanaa, the WHO’s head of the Standards and Scientific Advice on Food and Nutrition Unit, said in a statement.

In fact, JECFA “concluded that there was no convincing evidence from experimental animal or human data that aspartame has adverse effects after ingestion.” That’s partly because, during digestion, aspartame breaks down into metabolites that the body readily absorbs from other common foods, and thus no aspartame enters systemic circulation, the committee reported. The team also concluded that, based on various experimental studies, the sweetener doesn’t damage DNA and there isn’t evidence of another mechanism whereby eating aspartame could cause cancer.

In its evaluation, JECFA considered how much aspartame people actually consume in a day and “noted that even the high estimates of consumption levels in children and adults are considerably below” the established, safe threshold, according to a commentary published alongside the IARC’s report.

Along with the JECFA and the FDA, food safety regulators such as Health Canada and the European Food Safety Authority have also thoroughly evaluated aspartame in the past and maintain that the established daily intake levels are safe.

https://www.livescience.com/health/food-diet/no-aspartame-is-not-a-possible-carcinogen-fda-says-in-response-to-who-ruling

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Date: 17/07/2023 22:42:28
From: mollwollfumble
ID: 2055316
Subject: re: FDA: aspartame not a likely carcinogen

mollwollfumble says …

… that there is no sweetener of any kind that hasn’t been maligned in the press for medical reasons. Cyclamates, all the sugars, stevia, sucralose, etc.

For aspartame there is a very real severe risk. But only for people with PKU genetics. “Phenylketonuria (fen-ul-key-toe-NU-ree-uh), also called PKU, is a rare inherited disorder that causes an amino acid called phenylalanine to build up in the body.”

“classic PKU can cause severe brain damage.”

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Date: 18/07/2023 04:44:37
From: mollwollfumble
ID: 2055349
Subject: re: FDA: aspartame not a likely carcinogen

Does anyone have a list of carcinogens?
For instance is petrol or diesel fuel a carcinogen?
(Checks web) Yes, it is.

For carcinogens, as with poisons in general, it is essential to separate out the four main methods of exposure. Injection is deadlier than inhalation. Inhalation is deadlier than ingestion. Ingestion is deadlier than skin contact. For example, the products of the Maillard reaction (such as toast) are carcinogens if inhaled, but not if ingested.

For carcinogens ingested, the greatest indicator is always oral cancer. Papua New Guinea had the highest overall rate of mouth and oral cancers in 2020, followed by Bangladesh. Then Romania and Hungary, Cuba, Slovakia, India, Sri Lanka and Pakistan. Some of these may be due to inhalation rather than ingestion. For Papua New Guinea it has been suggested that Betel Nut is to blame.

Fermented fish sauce is a carcinogen for ingestion that I came across in the past.

I have a personal bias suggesting that hot foods are likely ingested carcinogens. Both hot spiced foods and hot plain food, anything with sufficient heat to cause pain. Highly spiced foods used to be a necessary survival technique in hot countries because the spices preserve foods that would otherwise get contaminated in the hot moist environment between picking and consumption.

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Date: 18/07/2023 06:59:48
From: roughbarked
ID: 2055354
Subject: re: FDA: aspartame not a likely carcinogen

I really don’t care. I hate the stuff. Anything with aspartame tastes like it is going to give you something you don’t want.

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Date: 18/07/2023 07:35:41
From: SCIENCE
ID: 2055355
Subject: re: FDA: aspartame not a likely carcinogen

So what’s the truth¿

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Date: 18/07/2023 07:42:27
From: ChrispenEvan
ID: 2055359
Subject: re: FDA: aspartame not a likely carcinogen

SCIENCE said:


So what’s the truth¿

can you handle the truth?

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Date: 18/07/2023 07:45:17
From: SCIENCE
ID: 2055362
Subject: re: FDA: aspartame not a likely carcinogen

ChrispenEvan said:

SCIENCE said:

So what’s the truth¿

can you handle the truth?

We’ve handled containers of ethidium bromide, does that count¿

Reply Quote

Date: 18/07/2023 07:46:43
From: roughbarked
ID: 2055364
Subject: re: FDA: aspartame not a likely carcinogen

SCIENCE said:

ChrispenEvan said:

SCIENCE said:

So what’s the truth¿

can you handle the truth?

We’ve handled containers of ethidium bromide, does that count¿

What is less truthful about Methyl Bromide?

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Date: 18/07/2023 07:52:16
From: SCIENCE
ID: 2055365
Subject: re: FDA: aspartame not a likely carcinogen

roughbarked said:

SCIENCE said:

ChrispenEvan said:

can you handle the truth?

We’ve handled containers of ethidium bromide, does that count¿

What is less truthful about Methyl Bromide?

Because ethidium bromide can bind with DNA, it is highly toxic as a mutagen. It may potentially cause carcinogenic or teratogenic effects, although no scientific evidence showing either health effect has been found.

But you’re right,

Bromomethane, commonly known as methyl bromide, is an organobromine compound with formula CH₃Br. This colorless, odorless, nonflammable gas is produced both industrially and biologically. It has a tetrahedral shape and it is a recognized ozone-depleting chemical.

so through its True Sunlight passing properties, along with the rarity with which people encounter ethidium, methyl bromide may well have caused more cancers than ethidium bromide has.

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Date: 18/07/2023 07:54:07
From: roughbarked
ID: 2055367
Subject: re: FDA: aspartame not a likely carcinogen

SCIENCE said:

roughbarked said:

SCIENCE said:

We’ve handled containers of ethidium bromide, does that count¿

What is less truthful about Methyl Bromide?

Because ethidium bromide can bind with DNA, it is highly toxic as a mutagen. It may potentially cause carcinogenic or teratogenic effects, although no scientific evidence showing either health effect has been found.

But you’re right,

Bromomethane, commonly known as methyl bromide, is an organobromine compound with formula CH₃Br. This colorless, odorless, nonflammable gas is produced both industrially and biologically. It has a tetrahedral shape and it is a recognized ozone-depleting chemical.

so through its True Sunlight passing properties, along with the rarity with which people encounter ethidium, methyl bromide may well have caused more cancers than ethidium bromide has.

Considering that it is more widely used by more members of the public. The chances are…

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Date: 18/07/2023 09:12:55
From: Peak Warming Man
ID: 2055371
Subject: re: FDA: aspartame not a likely carcinogen

I’ve just got one word on this and one word only.
BIG SUGAR

Reply Quote

Date: 18/07/2023 09:26:37
From: SCIENCE
ID: 2055374
Subject: re: FDA: aspartame not a likely carcinogen

Sugar is not a carcinogenic (cancer-causing) substance. However, over-consumption of sugar, particularly added sugars in processed beverages and foods, can contribute to obesity which is an important risk factor for cancer.

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Date: 18/07/2023 09:52:06
From: roughbarked
ID: 2055376
Subject: re: FDA: aspartame not a likely carcinogen

Amogst others such as cadmium and lead which are readily absorbed from the soil, radioactive polonium-210 is found in tobacco leaves, entering via the soil and possibly through the air.

Now, how many other plants contain toxic substances gathered in the same way?

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Date: 18/07/2023 10:27:09
From: SCIENCE
ID: 2055382
Subject: re: FDA: aspartame not a likely carcinogen

roughbarked said:

Amogst others such as cadmium and lead which are readily absorbed from the soil, radioactive polonium-210 is found in tobacco leaves, entering via the soil and possibly through the air.

Now, how many other plants contain toxic substances gathered in the same way?

25865568

Reply Quote

Date: 19/07/2023 12:12:41
From: mollwollfumble
ID: 2055662
Subject: re: FDA: aspartame not a likely carcinogen

Peak Warming Man said:


I’ve just got one word on this and one word only.
BIG SUGAR

Nope.

Big anti-chemical. All chemicals are said to be carcinogens don’t you know.

While looking on the web, I found a website on carcinogens that claimed that water was a carcinogen, and distinguished between three types of carcinogenic water – tap water, pool water, and pond water.

Reply Quote

Date: 19/07/2023 12:37:52
From: roughbarked
ID: 2055674
Subject: re: FDA: aspartame not a likely carcinogen

mollwollfumble said:


Peak Warming Man said:

I’ve just got one word on this and one word only.
BIG SUGAR

Nope.

Big anti-chemical. All chemicals are said to be carcinogens don’t you know.

While looking on the web, I found a website on carcinogens that claimed that water was a carcinogen, and distinguished between three types of carcinogenic water – tap water, pool water, and pond water.

You definitely don’t want to driink the pond water. The ponds at Jabiluka for instance.

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Date: 24/07/2023 12:07:04
From: mollwollfumble
ID: 2057508
Subject: re: FDA: aspartame not a likely carcinogen

roughbarked said:


You definitely don’t want to drink the pond water. The ponds at Jabiluka for instance.

Why not? It’s only radiation.

Very much less dangerous than anaerobic water-borne pathogens.
Come to think of it, much less dangerous than fish.

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