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The reason for all the excitement was a published this week in the well-respected journalFood and Chemical Toxicology.
The French scientists who conducted the study basically concluded that
rats fed a diet of genetically modified corn and small amounts of
herbicides got sicker faster than their counterparts eating regular corn
and no herbicides.
Based on the study, several
anti-GMO groups are calling for a ban and the French government is
calling for more investigation, but many scientists met the research
with a heavy dose of skepticism.
The study describes an experiment in
which scientists fed 18 different groups of rats (ten rats in each
group) various concentrations of a genetically engineered kind of corn
and/or small amounts of the herbicide Roundup. (Roundup is widely used
in combination with genetically engineered "Roundup Ready" crops.)
Two
control groups got a diet of non-modified corn and no Roundup. The
experiment went on for two years, an unusually long time. Most
experiments with rats that attempt to measure the toxic effects of
chemicals last only 90 days.
On average, the rats that ate GM
corn or drank water laced with Roundup did worse than the control group.
Tumors showed up earlier (at least in some of the groups) and more rats
died than in the control groups. The contrast was most stark among
female rats.
So is this solid evidence that GM corn (or other crops) are bad for you? The author of the paper,Gilles-Eric Seralini, who has been campaigning against GM crops since 1997, says yes. Definitely yes.
Other scientists say, absolutely not.
Some
of their complaints about the study are aimed at the study's methods.
Critics point out that the type of experimental rats used in this study
are particularly prone to tumors. So if you divide up 200 of them into
twenty groups, as this study did, you are likely to get very high tumor
rates in some of the groups. And the fact that such clusters of tumors
didn't show up in the two small control groups could easily be due to
random chance.
One particularly irreverent , Michael Grayer, a
medical statistician, pointed out that the study included 18 groups of
rats that were exposed to GMOs or Roundup (nine each for male and female
rats), compared to only two control groups. "The potential for
cherry-picking the nice positive results here from a sea of boring null
ones is immense," he wrote on his blog."Not saying they did it, of course, but it's certainly a concern."
Also,
if this experiment truly showed a link between genetically engineered
food and tumors, one might expect the rats that ate more of the GM corn
to develop more tumors. In fact, the opposite happened. The rats eating a
diet of 33 percent GMO corn stayed healthier than animals eating food
with a GMO concentration of just 11 percent.
Seralini, for his
part, says that this simply shows that GMOs are toxic in a different
way. They merely need to rise above a certain threshold level to have
harmful effects; increasing the concentration doesn't increase the harm.
Some
scientists were inclined to dismiss the study simply based on
Seralini's history of anti-GMO claims. "I know this guy. He has
published a lot of rubbish," says , a Dutch scientist who used to be in charge of the European Commission's
on the safety of genetically modified foods. That program sponsored
many previous studies, including animal feeding studies, which came to
less alarming conclusions and got much less attention than Seralini's.
In fact, Kuiper and many of his colleagues don't even think that animal feeding studies are a very good tool for studying the
safety of GM foods. If there was a harmful chemical hidden in GM corn,
they say, such studies wouldn't be likely to catch it, because rats
can't eat enough corn for them to get a harmful dose of the toxic or
cancer-causing substance.
But apart from methodological
concerns and personal animosity, there's a deeper reason why scientists
like Kuiper give little credence to Seralini's studies. There's a saying
in science: Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence. For
most of the scientists who have been studying the safety of GMOs, it's
an extraordinary claim, at this point, to assert that the current
generation of genetically modified crops are harmful to human health.
There's
no apparent reason why that should be true; No one has found new toxic
substances in these crops. And the giant feeding experiment that's been
going on for the past fifteen years — hundreds of millions of Americans
consuming GMO ingredients — hasn't produced evidence of harm, either.
It would take a lot more evidence that the results of this study to change their minds.
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