Cancer
Risk Found in French Fries, Bread
Excerpt
By Peter
Starck, Reuters
Health
STOCKHOLM (Reuters) - Basic foods eaten by millions around the
world such as bread, biscuits, potato chips and french fries contain
alarmingly high quantities of acrylamide, a substance believed
to cause cancer, Swedish scientists said on Wednesday.
The research carried out at Stockholm University in cooperation
with experts at Sweden's National Food Administration, a government
food safety agency, showed that heating of carbohydrate-rich foods,
such as potatoes, rice or cereals formed acrylamide, a much studied
substance classified as a probable human carcinogen.
The research was deemed so important that the scientists decided
on the unusual step of going public with their findings before
the research had been officially published in an academic journal.
"I have been in this field for 30 years and I have never seen
anything like this before," said Leif Busk, head of the food administration's
research department.
Findings unveiled at a news conference called by the food administration
showed that an ordinary bag of potato chips may contain up to
500 times more of the substance than the top level allowed in
drinking water by the World Health Organization.
French fries sold at Swedish franchises of U.S. fast-food chains
Burger King Corp and McDonald's contained about 100 times the
one microgram per liter maximum permitted by the WHO for drinking
water, the study showed.
One milligram, or 0.001 grams, contains 1,000 micrograms.
KNOWN HAZARD
The Environmental Protection Agency classifies acrylamide, a
colorless, crystalline solid, as a medium hazard probable human
carcinogen.
According to the International Agency for Research on Cancer,
acrylamide induces gene mutations and has been found in animal
tests to cause benign and malignant stomach tumors.
It is also known to cause damage to the central and peripheral
nervous system.
"The discovery that acrylamide is formed during the preparation
of food, and at high levels, is new knowledge. It may now be possible
to explain some of the cases of cancer caused by food," Busk said.
"Fried, oven-baked and deep-fried potato and cereal products
may contain high levels of acrylamide," the administration said.
"Acrylamide is formed during the preparation of food and occurs
in many foodstuffs...Many of the analyzed foodstuffs are consumed
in large quantities, e.g. potato crisps, french fries, fried potatoes,
biscuits and bread."
Among products analyzed in the study were potato chips made
by Finnish company CHIPS ABP, whose shares fell 14.5 percent to
six-month lows, as well as breakfast cereals made by U.S. Kellogg,
Quaker Oats Co, part of PepsiCo Inc, and Swiss Nestle, and Old
El Paso brand tortilla chips.
"For us, these are completely new findings which have never
before been known to the world's foodstuffs industry," CHIPS ABP
said in a statement to the Helsinki stock exchange.
Stefan Eriksson, marketing manager Burger King's subsidiary
in Sweden, told Reuters by telephone: "We have received the information
and we are evaluating what it will mean."
Spokesmen for the other companies mentioned in the research
were not immediately available for comment.
NO PRODUCTS WITHDRAWN
Margareta Tornqvist, an associate professor at Stockholm University's
department of environmental chemistry, said the consumption of
a single potato crisp could take acrylamide intake up to the WHO
maximum for drinking water.
Busk said, however, that the product analysis based on more
than 100 random samples was not extensive enough for the administration
to recommend the withdrawal of any products from supermarket shelves.
"Frying at high temperatures or for a long time should be avoided,"
Busk said, adding: "Our advice to eat less fat-rich products such
as french fries and crisps, remains valid."
He said the findings applied worldwide, not only to Sweden,
as the food raw materials used in the analyzes had showed no traces
of acrylamide.
Swedish authorities had informed the European Commission and
EU member countries, Busk said.
"It is the first time we have come across such a result. We
will evaluate this study and look at it but it is important to
say that Sweden has not withdrawn any products from the market,"
said European Commission spokeswoman Beate Gminder.
"Therefore we'll have to see what the scientific evaluation
by our side and by scientists in the member states will bring
about," she said.
Liliane Abramsson-Zetterberg, a toxicologist at the Swedish
food administration, said: "The cancer risk from acrylamide is
much higher than (the levels) we accept for known carcinogens."
But smoking, which is known to cause cancer, remained a bigger
risk, she said.
Reference
Source 89
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