Scientists Condemn Human Experiment with GE Food
Scientists Condemn Human Experiment with GE
Food
The use of human subjects including children
as young as 6 years old, in trials of a novel GE
food is being condemned by scientists internationally and
by GE Free NZ (in food and environment).
GE 'golden
rice' has been promoted as a solution to malnutrition,
despite other readily-available sources of vitamin A.
Deficiencies of the vitamin are a cause of blindness amongst
the poor.
The experimental rice has been highly
contentious and now scientists are condemning feeding
experiments being undertaken with human subjects by
other researchers at Tufts University. The plans include
testing the food on children. One report states:
"This
project is to determine the vitamin A value (equivalence) of
dietary provitamin A carotenes from spinach, Golden Rice,
and pure ß-carotene (ß-C) in oil. These experiments will
be conducted in children (ages 6-8) with/without adequate
(marginal deficiency) vitamin A nutrition."
*(3)
"Allowing human feeding trials of this
experimental rice is highly concerning and a frightening
breach of human rights," says Jon Carapiet from GE-Free New
Zealand.
"The New Zealand government must make its
opposition clear and be a voice in the international
community for the ethical use of science, just as we are
for nuclear weapons."
Alarm about the experiments
comes just days after the US authorities approved the first
drug produced in GE animals following human clinical
trials. The decision will increase commercial pressure for
unethical experiments that are premature or exploit
people in human trials. The predicted gold-rush to
'pharm' animals for medicines will impact New
Zealand.
It threatens to transform Fonterra and
New Zealand's reputation for the worse, as New Zealand is
targetted for the production of pharmaceuticals in
GE cows, sheep and other animals.
'Pharming' will
blur the distinction between food and chemicals, disrupting
our brand image far more significantly than the
recent melamine contamination in milk powder in
China.
"John Key and the National government must
protect ethical standards in commercialised science at home
and internationally," says Jon Carapiet. "It is morally
right and in the national interest to speak out in
opposition to unethical human experimentation whether it's
for GE food or for GE medicine."
ENDS
References
TUFTS UNIVERSITY
INVOLVEMENT IN GOLDEN RICE FEEDING TRIALS
Professor
Robert Russell, Professor Emeritus, Friedman
School of
Nutrition Science and Policy Tufts University
School of
Medicine 711 Washington Street Boston, MA
02111-
1524
Email: rob.russell@tufts.edu
Dear Professor Russell,
TUFTS UNIVERSITY INVOLVEMENT IN GOLDEN
RICE FEEDING
TRIALS
**********************************************************
We
are writing to express our shock and
unequivocal
denunciation of the experiments being
conducted by your
colleagues which involve the feeding of
genetically modified
Golden Rice to human subjects
(adults and children.) We are
all senior scientists /
academics with a professional
interest in the health
and environmental effects of GMOs.
We refer to three
trials described on the US Clinical Trials
web
site:
1. Project NCT 00680355.(10) Bioavailability of
Golden Rice
Carotenoids in
Humans.
http://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/record/NCT00680355?term=golden
2.
Project NCT 00082420. Retinol Equivalence of
Plant
Carotenoids in
Children.
http://clinicaltrials.gov/archive/NCT00082420
3.
Project NCT 00680212. Vitamin A Equivalence of
Plant
Carotenoids in
Children.
http://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/record/NCT00680212?term=golden
We
wish to remind you that the variety of Golden Rice
used
in these experiments (GR2) is inadequately described
in
terms of biological and biochemical characterisation
on the
Clinical Trials web site and indeed anywhere else
in the
publicly available literature, and has woefully
inadequate
pre-clinical evaluation. It is a
genetically
modified
product which has not been shown
to be distinctive, uniform
and stable over time. It has
never been through a
regulatory /approvals process
anywhere in the world. There
is now a large body of
evidence that shows that GM crop/food
production is
highly prone to inadvertent and unpredictable
pleiotropic
effects, which can result in health damaging
effects when
GM food products are fed to animals (for
reviews see
Pusztai and Bardocz , 2006; Schubert, 2008; Dona
and
Arvanitoyannis, 2009). More specifically, our
greatest
concern is that this rice, which is engineered
to
overproduce beta carotene, has never been tested in
animals,
and there is an extensive medical literature
showing that
retinoids that can be derived from beta
carotene are both
toxic and cause birth defects.
In
these circumstances the use of human subjects
(including
children who are already suffering illness as
a
result of
Vitamin A deficiency) for GM feeding
experiments is
completely unacceptable. The three
Projects listed breach
the Nuremberg Code / medical
ethics code on a number of
counts, and we urge you to
call them to a halt immediately.
They should not be
resumed unless and until the researchers
can demonstrate
that a full range of laboratory and animal
feeding trials
have been completed and published for the
Golden Rice
strain being used, and unless and until
appropriate
regulatory bodies have had an opportunity to
come to a
view on the health and safety issues about which
we are
very concerned.
We can assure you that such trials would
not have been
approved within the European Union in the
absence of safety
information, which highlights yet again
the flaw of the USDA
and FDA regulatory system in
considering GM crops/foods as
hypothetically “generally
recognised as safe – GRAS” in
the
absence of hard
experimental
data.
References:
***********
(1) Pusztai A.
and Bardocz S. (2006). GMO in animal
nutrition: potential
benefits and risks. In: Biology of
Nutrition in Growing
Animals, eds. R. Mosenthin, J. Zentek
and T. Zebrowska,
Elsevier Limited, pp. 513-540.
(2) Schubert D.R.
(2008) The problem with nutritionally
enhanced plants.
J Med Food. 11: 601-605.
(3) Dona A. and
Arvanitoyannis I.S. (2009) Health Risks
of Genetically
Modified Foods. Crit Rev Food Sci Nutr.,
49:
164–175.
These unethical and potentially
dangerous trials MUST be
stopped, and we ask you to
undertake a thorough review of
why and how they were
approved and funded in the first
place. Please accept
this letter as a formal protest, and
please forward it to
the relevant authorities at USDA, FDA,
NIDDK, NIH and the
US State
Department.
ends