What is aspartame and what do the new WHO rulings on cancer and
consumption mean?
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[July 15, 2023]
(Reuters) - Aspartame, a popular artificial sweetener found in
Diet Coke, chewing gum, yoghurt and other food products, is a "possible
carcinogen" but it remains safe to consume at the existing daily intake
guidelines, according to new rulings from two different World Health
Organization-linked groups.
WHAT IS ASPARTAME?
Discovered in 1965 by American chemist James Schlatter, aspartame is
about 200 times sweeter than regular table sugar. It was approved by the
U.S. Food and Drug Administration in 1974 for use as a tabletop
sweetener and as an additive in chewing gum, breakfast cereals and dry
bases for foods.
WHAT ARE THE NEW RULINGS, AND WHO MADE THEM?
One group of experts, the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC),
said aspartame is a "possible carcinogen". That means there is limited
evidence showing a potential cancer link and puts it in the same
classification group as aloe vera extract and some Asian pickled
vegetables.
Another expert panel, the WHO/FAO Joint Committee on Food Additives (JECFA),
also reviewed aspartame and maintained its advice that it remains safe
to consume within current recommended daily limits. For aspartame, this
limit is 40 milligrams of aspartame per kilogram of body weight per day.
That means an adult weighing 70 kg (approximately 150 pounds) would need
to consume between 9 and 14 cans of diet soft drink in one day to
surpass the limit.
WHAT DOES THIS MEAN?
There has been some confusion around the rulings, but the agencies say
they are "complementary". The two groups work differently, and have a
different aim: while IARC flags a potential hazard based on even limited
evidence, JECFA assesses the real-life risk.
Gunter Kuhnle, professor of nutrition at the United Kingdom's University
of Reading, said it highlighted the difference between hazard and risk.
"Sunlight is a hazard as it can cause cancer, but the risk depends on
the amount of sunlight and whether we use protection. Likewise, even if
aspartame causes cancer at very high amounts, there is no risk when
consuming it at the amounts that are permitted in foods," he said.
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Packages of Diet Coke are seen on
display at a market in New York City, New York, U.S., June 28, 2023.
REUTERS/Mike Segar
WHY IS ASPARTAME POPULAR?
Because aspartame is very sweet, much less is needed in products to
create the same taste as sugar, so it has a calorific value of
almost zero. It also does not have the bitter aftertaste of
saccharin, another sweetener. Aspartame grew in popularity as a more
diet-conscious consumer emerged in the 1980s.
WHAT PRODUCTS CONTAIN ASPARTAME?
The low-calorie sugar substitute can be found in soft drinks,
gelatin, confectionery, desserts, and sugar-free cough drops. It is
also used to enhance flavoring of baked and canned foods, powdered
drink mixes, candy and puddings.
WHAT OTHER ARTIFICIAL SWEETENERS ARE IN USE?
Saccharin, sucralose and neotame are among the artificial sweeteners
for which JECFA has recommendations.
The FDA has also authorized three types of plant- and fruit-based
sweeteners, including extracts obtained from the stevia plant,
swingle fruit extracts and a group of proteins called Thaumatin.
IS ASPARTAME USED WORLDWIDE?
More than 90 countries, including the United Kingdom, Spain, France,
Italy, Denmark, Germany, Australia and New Zealand have reviewed
aspartame and found it to be safe for human consumption and allow
its use.
Source: WHO, IARC, JECFA, company websites, FDA, EFSA, National
Library of Medicine
(Reporting by Elissa Welle in New York and Savyata Mishra and
Deborah Sophia in Bengaluru; Editing by Caroline Humer and Catherine
Evans)
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