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Medicine United States

FDA Says Aspartame Is Safe, Disagreeing With WHO's Cancer Link 161

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) disagrees with the World Health Organization's recent assessment that aspartame possibly causes cancer in humans. "Aspartame is one of the most studied food additives in the human food supply. FDA scientists do not have safety concerns when aspartame is used under the approved conditions," an agency spokesperson said. CNBC reports: The International Agency for Research on Cancer, a WHO body, found a possible link between aspartame and a type of liver cancer called hepatocellular carcinoma after reviewing three large human studies in the U.S. and Europe. Dr. Mary Schubauer-Berigan, a senior official at IARC, emphasized that the WHO classification of aspartame as a possible carcinogen is based on limited evidence. Schubauer-Berigan acknowledged during a news conference with journalists Wednesday that the studies could contain flaws that skewed the results. She said the classification should be viewed as a call to conduct more research into whether aspartame can cause cancer in humans. "This shouldn't really be taken as a direct statement that indicates that there is a known cancer hazard from consuming aspartame," Schubauer-Berigan said.

The FDA spokesperson said the classification of aspartame as "possibly carcinogenic to humans" does not mean the sugar substitute is actually linked to cancer. Health Canada and the European Food Safety Authority have also concluded that aspartame is safe at the current permitted levels, the spokesperson said. A separate body of international scientists called the Joint Expert Committee on Food Additives said Thursday that the evidence of an association between aspartame and cancer in humans is not convincing. JECFA is an international group made up of scientists from the WHO and the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization. JECFA makes recommendations about how much of a product people can safely consume. The organization maintained its recommendation that it is safe for a person to consume 40 milligrams of aspartame per kilogram of body weight daily during their lifetime. An adult who weighs 70 kilograms, or 154 pounds, would have to drink more than nine to 14 cans of aspartame-containing soda daily to exceed the limit and potentially face health risks.

The U.S. Health and Human Services Department told the WHO in an August 2022 letter that JECFA is better suited to provide public health recommendations about the safety of aspartame in food. This is because JECFA reviews all available data, both public and private proprietary information, whereas the IARC only looks at public data. "Thus, an IARC review of aspartame, by comparison, would be incomplete and its conclusion could be confusing to consumers," Mara Burr, who heads the HHS office of multilateral relations, wrote in the letter. The FDA has a slightly higher recommendation than JECFA and says it is safe for a person to consume 50 milligrams of aspartame per kilogram of body weight daily during their lifetime. A person who weighs 132 pounds would have to consume 75 packets of aspartame per day to reach this limit.
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FDA Says Aspartame Is Safe, Disagreeing With WHO's Cancer Link

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  • Huh (Score:3, Funny)

    by TWX ( 665546 ) on Friday July 14, 2023 @08:29PM (#63687213)

    The Food and Drug Administration disagrees with WHO?

    • Re:Huh (Score:5, Funny)

      by Okian Warrior ( 537106 ) on Friday July 14, 2023 @08:55PM (#63687241) Homepage Journal

      The Food and Drug Administration disagrees with WHO?

      I don't know (third base.)

    • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

      How dare you not trust the experts?

    • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Friday July 14, 2023 @10:15PM (#63687365)
      you'd need to drink 12 cans a day to hit their numbers. Try doing that with sugared soda and see what it does to your cancer risk.
      • You'd need to drink 12 cans a day to hit their numbers.
        Try doing that with sugared soda and see what it does to your cancer risk.

        Or, more likely, your risk of diabetes -- and ability to sleep.

      • by sosume ( 680416 )

        I wouldn't consider any kind of sugar pop as alternative to the aspartame based drinks, they are extremely bad for your health. There's nothing wrong with just drinking water, tea or coffee instead. Or beer if you really want those calories.

      • You know they put aspartame in more than just fizzy drinks, right?
      • Eh, used to drink a 12 pack of Mt. Dew almost daily. Was never an issue for me.
      • An average American drinks 4 cans of this crap a day.

      • There are plenty of people in the US who drink at least that much, if not more. There's a reason we have an obesity epidemic.
      • I used to drink two 1.75 liter bottles of coca cola a day. That is way more than the 12 cans you mention. Thanks to that bad habit I have quite a few health issues. I switched to carbonated water, and regular water.
    • The Food and Drug Administration disagrees with WHO?

      WHO-da-thunk it?

    • by Zocalo ( 252965 )
      More like the FDA didn't really understand what the WHO was saying, or deliberately chose not to because lobby^w reasons.

      WHO's statement was based on analysis of what even they admit is *very* sketchy data from animal studies indicating a possible correlation between aspartame and an increased risk of cancer and only then at ridiculously high levels of consumption that you'd really struggle to meet, so they've given it the lowest possible risk rating and suggested further studies and do no recommend that
  • by bill_mcgonigle ( 4333 ) * on Friday July 14, 2023 @08:32PM (#63687215) Homepage Journal

    A commenter thoroughly explained this in the prior story. TFS kinda disrespects that.

    TL;DR it's in the same class as driving a car.

    • TL;DR it's in the same class as driving a car.

      Which is an insanely risky thing which kills many people. The difference is I don't need to consume aspartame to get to work.

    • Putting petrol or diesel into a car exposes you to a lot of very harmful & carcinogenic compounds. Driving any kind of car with typical tyres exposes everyone who lives anywhere near roads to very harmful & carcinogenic compounds. Then there's all the injuries & deaths from driving collisions.

      If aspartame is *that* dangerous, we'd be well-advised to avoid it. Additionally, the WHO published findings that low calorie sweeteners are not an effective strategy for people who are trying to lose we
  • Obesity (Score:5, Informative)

    by backslashdot ( 95548 ) on Friday July 14, 2023 @08:35PM (#63687219)

    Obesity is riskier, and higher probability of not just cancer but all kinds of chronic-level shit. Have you ever seen an obese person in their 90s, let alone 100s? Which you might think is fine "live a little" etc. but then the problem is not just reduced life expectancy but morbidity .. meaning you wont just drop dead but instead have some chronic ailments etc. Better to endure the pain of skipping the carbs than have to pay back the loan of suffering X times over.

    • by Okian Warrior ( 537106 ) on Friday July 14, 2023 @09:03PM (#63687253) Homepage Journal

      Obesity is riskier, and higher probability of not just cancer but all kinds of chronic-level shit. Have you ever seen an obese person in their 90s, let alone 100s? Which you might think is fine "live a little" etc. but then the problem is not just reduced life expectancy but morbidity .. meaning you wont just drop dead but instead have some chronic ailments etc. Better to endure the pain of skipping the carbs than have to pay back the loan of suffering X times over.

      Yea, but being fit is the same as white supremacy [msnbc.com].

      You wouldn't want to be a white supremacist now, would you?

    • Obesity is riskier

      This isn't an either or question, and alternatives to aspartame exist even if you do subscribe to it being an "obesity solution".

    • The WHO has also reported that low calorie sweeteners are an ineffective strategy for losing weight. Just switching to water instead of sugary drinks will have all kinds of beneficial health effects.
    • Obesity causes liver disease. Liver disease causes liver cancer. Obesity also causes use of artificial sweeteners. Hence, artificial sweeteners are linked with liver cancer.

  • Given how many people have been ingesting aspartame and the length of time that most people ingest aspartame, if there was a meaningful cancer risk the signal for it would be really high. The WHO found weak signals in a few studies. At that point who cares.

    • by Tony Isaac ( 1301187 ) on Friday July 14, 2023 @10:49PM (#63687397) Homepage

      It could be true, I suppose. The reason we don't see a connection is that the WHO's guidelines suggest consuming less than 30 cans of diet soda per day, which is about 500 packets-worth of Equal. https://www.cnn.com/2023/07/13... [cnn.com]. Who could possibly consume that much? If we study people who DO consume this much aspartame, I'll bet we WILL find significant health problems.

      • If we study people who DO consume this much aspartame, I'll bet we WILL find significant health problems.

        And they probably won't be from the Aspartame.

        The WHO's study specifically says they didn't control for any lifestyle factors. People who consume dangerous levels of Aspartame probably do all sorts of other bad things, too.

    • Given how many people have been ingesting aspartame and the length of time that most people ingest aspartame, if there was a meaningful cancer risk the signal for it would be really high.

      The signal that we are doing something to dramatically increase cancer rates in society IS really high. Cancer rates are through the roof compared to the past. The question is what are those activities we do or things we consume, and for that we need targeted studies to isolate the sources.

      Studies have been done. They have almost universally shown aspartame is associated with an increase in cancer: https://journals.plos.org/plos... [plos.org] While studies which show *LIMITED* intake do not associate with a cancer inc

      • by Entrope ( 68843 )

        Other things that IARC classifies as "possibly carcinogenic to humans" and thus, according to you, "there is no doubt" they cause cancer: traditional Asian pickled vegetables, progestins and progestogen-only contraceptives, extremely-low-frequency magnetic fields, RF electromagnetic fields, carbon black, one specific kind of multiwalled carbon nanotubes (but not other nanotubes), caffeic acid (found in all plants), magenta, and Aloe vera.

        Things that are more certain to cause cancer include sunlight, carpent

  • Go! (Score:2, Funny)

    by Z80a ( 971949 )

    Medicine nerd fight!
    Medicine nerd fight!
    Medicine nerd fight!

  • Doctors told my father he had six months to live.
    Every six months. For 20 years.

    Doctors can't agree on chicken eggs. Are they good? Are they bad? Some? Bunches? None?

    Not to put too fine a point on it, but give it up, live how you want. You won't get out of life alive anyway. 90 years is a long, long time to be unhappy. 70, having fun, pinching bottoms, quaffing a beverage, and or inhaling may cost you that time at the end, but it is an individual choice if it's worth it or not.

    • by Z80a ( 971949 )

      Those "doctors say" articles are basically "doctors released some numbers that will get abused and amplified to death by journalists to attract more eyes"

    • Well according to most (all?) serious religions if you live a life of debauchery you'll have to pay for all the fun eventually. Either by going to hell or by coming back as a slave or roach or something in the next life.

      • by gtall ( 79522 )

        I'd like, "Can I be reborn in a religion-free planet?", Alex, for $400.

        Alex: Oooooo....no, that option was put up there by mistake, sorry. We cannot have a lot religious nutjobs running around with no one but themselves to make miserable. By the time they get here to the Pearly Gates, St. Pete has no option but send them off to limbo; Beelzebub stopped accepting them years ago. They are simple too insufferable to allow in either Heaven or Hell.

  • Back in the 70's saccharin (the pink packet sweetener) was found to cause cancer. Later researched found it was only in mice, and not relevant to humans. Sometimes you have to double check things and not instantly panic.
    • Blame the sugar lobby. They have been buying academics to boost their product and defame artificial sweeteners for years. The classic case was cyclamate. The researcher later admitted that he drew the cancers on the rats with a felt tip pen, but it is still banned in the US. It is a far better product in many ways than what we use today. The sad truth is that the toxicological tests used to predict if something causes cancer are virtually worthless. They have no scientific basis, but they are the best
      • by Z80a ( 971949 )

        I do have the impression the sugar lobby is probably the closest thing to what conspiracy theorists say about the system and government etc..
        Except they're all under the sugar lobby's grasp

    • by HiThere ( 15173 )

      IIUC, this time you need to consume an insane amount of aspartame to (probably) raise your cancer risk a tiny bit. So they're probably both correct...sort of.

  • The FDA is composed of individuals from Big Food and Big Pharma. There is too much money to be made with aspartame sales. They donâ(TM)t care about the health of American people because there is also money to be made from sick American people. Itâ(TM)s all about money. Not health.
    • Agreed. As if cancer is the only bad thing that fake sugar that chemically looks a lot like real sugar can cause.

      As if cancer is the only reason not to smoke cigarettes.

      And hey, diesel isnt gasoline so it wont harm your gasoline engine, right?
  • by Midnight Thunder ( 17205 ) on Friday July 14, 2023 @10:41PM (#63687391) Homepage Journal

    I donâ(TM)t care what the suggested maximum due is, I still find drinks with aspartame taste bad. Iâ(TM)d rather drink less soda drinks, but keep the real sugar in them.

    • I donâ(TM)t care what the suggested maximum due is, I still find drinks with aspartame taste bad. Iâ(TM)d rather drink less soda drinks, but keep the real sugar in them.

      Of course, but you soon get used to it.

      You think anybody's first beer tasted good?

    • by f00zbll ( 526151 )

      exactly! that shit tastes terrible. the real issue is the sugar lobby has fucked up the US for the sake of profit. the country would be better off if we consumed 1/5th the sugar.

  • Is this like how studies show MSG is bad for you?  And the study basically assume you eat a 100 pounds of it a year? lol
  • Essentially they are saying the same: There is no link between Aspartame and Cancer.

    Essentially it's on the "Group 2B" list:
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

  • by sombragris ( 246383 ) on Saturday July 15, 2023 @02:32AM (#63687579) Homepage

    I really don't understand the WHO here. We're not talking about saccharin or cyclamate, we're talking about aspartame! Its formula is rather straightforward: a methyl ester of an aspartate-phenylalanine dipeptide. In acid medium (for example, human stomach) it is hydrolyized to methanol and the two individual aminoacids.

    And it has some good drawbacks. It's poison to those with phenylketonuria. And, it's hydrolyzed to methanol, which again is incredibly toxic. So it would be toxic, especially in high quantities... but carcinogenic? Then we would stop eating proteins, because phenylalanine and aspartate are carcinogenic? Doesn't really make any sense to me.

    Anyone who claims that aspartame is linked to cancer should offer at least a plausuble explanation of its alleged carcinogenicity.

  • The WHO may be wrong or right, but if their data is public then they are doing science, because they can be argued with. The FDA on the other hand seem to be saying that they know better due to 'private' i.e. secret data. It's possible the FDA is correct, but it's still not science.

    • The FDA is pretty much a singular entity, the WHO is pretty much a mob.

      We know that both dish out more bad science than is expected through random chance alone.

      The entire fake sugar industry isnt good. The whole premise is suspect.

      Would you expect no consequences if you regularly tricked your body into thinking that you drank water when you didnt?
      Would you expect no consequences if you regularly tricked your body into thinking that you ate food when you didnt?
      Would you expect no consequences if you
  • The WHO is exclusively listing if something can cause cancer or not. The FDA is saying that aspartame does not cause cancer *below the recommended daily intake value*. The science linking aspartame to cancer is quite clear, what is an open question is the dose rate and many studies do agree (and some don't) that the FDA recommended maximum daily intake is safe... and also quite hard to reach.

    These are not the same discussions. They are talking past each other, or more likely some brain dead media organisati

  • This is the same problem as Glyphosate. Some of the best analysed chemicals can show the possibility to cause cancer because they use an unfit method to analyse the data.
    They use the P>0.05 significance test. This means one in 20 tests are positive just by chance. Then they look at 20 cancer types separately, and voila: on average one of them is positive just by chance! Although the statistics for the total cancer rate gives no positive result.
    https://xkcd.com/882/ [xkcd.com]

    And also, they only look at the pro
  • Won't get fooled again. No no.
  • Given how the FDA is mislead by the sugar lobby to demonize healthy fats, you have to suspect the FDA's pronouncements until we can be absolutely sure the studies they rely on to make their judgements are shown to have no links to the aspartame lobby.
  • by loufoque ( 1400831 ) on Saturday July 15, 2023 @07:40AM (#63687899)

    This completely unbiased American study is brought to you by our platinum sponsor, the Coca-Cola company.

  • I always see aspartame in the news, and it isn't for anything good. If you don't care about your weight, just use real sugar products.

    If you care about your weight, just use real sugar products, use less or abstain, and exercise more.

  • by Mozai ( 3547 ) on Saturday July 15, 2023 @08:50AM (#63687965) Homepage

    "The FDA spokesperson said the classification of aspartame as "possibly carcinogenic to humans" does not mean the sugar substitute is actually linked to cancer."

    That's in agreement with the WHO statement. Why are you framing this as a disagreement?

    "the WHO classification of aspartame as a possible carcinogen is based on limited evidence..."

    Yeah, that's why it's a class 2b substance, along with coffee, pickled vegetables, and celphones, instead of a class 2a substance. Does CNBC intentionally misread things, not even bothering to read the wikipedia page? Do YOU not do any reading before appending your headlines to these?

  • This appears to be further evidence of FDA's corporate tampering. In the U.S. Stevia is a "nutritional supplement", or whatever lie they are working under the predilection.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
  • FDA - is it influenced by big lobby groups?
    WHO - is it influenced by big lobby groups?
    You decide - can you trust an organisation that is influenced by corporate giants whose primary concern is to turn an annual profit for their shareholder?

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