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What Is Aspartame?
Aspartame, one of the most common artificial sweeteners used
today, is sold as NutraSweet® and Equal®. It is used in many foods and
beverages instead of sugar because it is about 200 times sweeter than
sugar, has fewer calories than sugar, and it does not cause tooth
decay. Aspartame is made up of three chemicals that are all naturally
found in foods and can be found in the body.
How Are People Exposed to
Aspartame?
People are exposed to aspartame through the foods they eat.
Aspartame is commonly used as a tabletop sweetener, as a sweetener in
prepared foods and beverages, and in simple recipes that do not require
too much heating (since heat breaks down aspartame).
FDA Approval
In 1981, after careful review, the Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) approved the use of aspartame. It was then used in
many foods, such as cold breakfast cereals, chewing gum, dry drink
mixes, instant tea and coffee, gelatins, puddings, fillings, non-dairy
toppings, and as a tabletop sweetener. It was approved in 1983 for use
in carbonated beverages and carbonated beverage syrups. Today it is
found in even more food products.
How Much Aspartame is Safe?
Who Decides Safe Levels?
Two units of the United Nations, the World Health Organization
(WHO) and the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), through their
Joint Expert Committee on Food Additives (JECFA), recommend Acceptable
Daily Intake (ADI) levels for many food additives. The ADI is the
amount of an additive that, if eaten every day for the rest of a
person's life, would be considered safe. In the US, the FDA sets ADI
guidelines.
How Much is Safe?
Animal studies in the 1970s found that rats could eat 4 grams
of aspartame per kilogram of body weight without showing health
problems. To be safe, the JECFA divided this dose by 100, and set the
Acceptable Daily Intake of aspartame for humans at 40 milligrams per
kilogram of body weight.
The FDA, now has stated that the acceptable daily intake of
aspartame for humans is 50 milligrams per kilogram of body weight.
This is equivalent to 3500 milligrams per day for a typical
70-kilogram (about 150 pounds) adult, far more than most adults take in
daily. For comparison, a can of diet soft drink contains about 180
milligrams of aspartame . So a typical adult could drink 19 cans of
diet soft drink each day before going over the recommended level. A
30-kilogram (66 pounds) child would have to drink more than 8 cans of
diet soda daily to reach the ADI for aspartame.
Does Aspartame Cause Cancer?
Soon after aspartame was introduced to the market, its safety
was questioned. Its role in cancer risk has been widely debated over
the last few decades. Concerns still exist today and studies continue
to look at the safety of aspartame and other artificial sweeteners.
As recently as April 2007, the FDA released this statement:
"Considering results from the large number of studies on aspartame's
safety, including five previously conducted negative chronic
carcinogenicity studies, a recently reported large epidemiology study
with negative associations between the use of aspartame and the
occurrence of tumors, and negative findings from a series of three
transgenic mouse assays, FDA finds no reason to alter its previous
conclusion that aspartame is safe as a general purpose sweetener in
food."
What Do the Experts Say?
Aspartame has been approved for use as a sweetener by the FDA
and by the Joint Expert Committee on Food Additives of the United
Nations Food and Agricultural Organization, and the World Health
Organization. They have concluded that aspartame does not cause cancer
or other adverse health effects in the general population. Though
research into a possible link between aspartame and cancer continues,
no study to date has had results that change this conclusion.
Does Aspartame Cause Any Other
Health Problems?
Phenylketonuria (PKU)
People born with a rare genetic disorder called
phenylketonuria or PKU cannot break down (metabolize) the amino acid
phenylalanine. This amino acid occurs naturally and is found in
aspartame. PKU is usually detected in babies by a routine blood test at
birth. People with the disorder are placed on a
phenylalanine-restricted diet and must avoid aspartame.
Other Complaints
The FDA received hundreds of complaints of various symptoms
after aspartame was introduced. The most common symptoms were headache,
dizziness, stomach (gastrointestinal) symptoms, and change in mood.
Less often, seizures were reported. The symptoms did not follow any
particular pattern and most were minor. The Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention (CDC) concluded that "although it may be that certain
individuals have an unusual sensitivity to the product, these data do
not provide evidence for the existence of serious, widespread, adverse
health consequences attendant to the use of aspartame."
Claims are still made that aspartame is related to numerous
health effects including: Alzheimer disease, birth defects, cancer,
diabetes, Gulf War syndrome, attention deficit disorders, lupus,
multiple sclerosis, and seizures. However, there is very little
scientific evidence to support these claims. Human exposure studies
done to date, in which volunteers eat known quantities of aspartame,
have not shown any evidence of harm.
Methanol, one of the breakdown products of aspartame, is toxic
to humans when large doses are eaten and could possibly cause blindness and
even death. However, the amount of methanol produced when aspartame is
broken down is minimal and well below the level that is a risk to human
health.
What Should I Do If I’ve Been
Exposed to Aspartame?
You should be able to see if you have taken in aspartame by
reading food and drink labels. If you have eaten food that contains
aspartame and you are concerned about the possible health effects that
may occur, talk with your health care provider.
If you want to avoid aspartame, check all food labels before
you buy or eat food or drink.
What's the Bottom Line?
Research on artificial sweeteners, including aspartame,
continues today. Current evidence does not demonstrate any link between
aspartame and an increased risk of cancer.
Aspartame has not been linked with other health problems
except among people with the genetic disorder, phenylketonuria. People
with this disorder should avoid aspartame in their diet.
What Other National
Organizations Look at Aspartame?
United States Food and Drug Administration
Internet Address: http://www.fda.gov
Two pages at the FDA site are especially informative:
http://www.fda.gov/fdac/features/1999/699_sugar.html and
http://www.fda.gov/bbs/topics/ANSWERS/ANS00772.html.
National Cancer Institute
Internet Address: http://www.cancer.gov/
An especially informative page is
http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/factsheet/AspartameQandA.
National Institutes of Health
Internet Address: http://www.nih.gov
An especially informative page is
http://cancernet.nci.nih.gov/clinpdq/risk/Artificial_Sweeteners.html.
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Revised: 06/30/2007
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