British chef and food activist Jamie Oliver ignited a firestorm in January 2011 when he mentioned on the Late Show with David Letterman that castoreum, a substance used to augment some strawberry and vanilla flavorings, comes from what he described as “rendered beaver anal gland.” The next year, vegans were outraged to learn that Starbucks used cochineal extract, a color additive derived from insect shells, to dye their strawberry Frappuccino drinks (eventually, the company decided to transition to lycopene, a pigment found in tomatoes).Although substances like castoreum and cochineal extract may be long on the “yuck factor,” research has shown them to be perfectly safe for most people; strident opposition arose not from safety issues but from the ingredients’ origins. But these examples demonstrate that the public often lacks significant knowledge about the ingredients in foods and where they come from.This is not a new development; the public relationship to food additives has a long history of trust lost, regained, and in some cases lost again. The Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic (FD&C) Act of 1938 was passed shortly after the deaths of 100 people who took an untested new form of a popular drug, which contained what turned out to be a deadly additive. The new law was consumer oriented and intended to ensure that people knew what was in the products they bought, and that those products were safe.The law has been amended over the years in attempts to streamline and bring order to the sprawling task of assessing and categorizing the thousands of substances used in foods, drugs, and cosmetics. One result of this streamlining is that under current U.S. law, companies can add certain types of ingredients to foods without premarket approval from the thin-stretched Food and Drug Administration (FDA). In other words, there are substances in the food supply that are unknown to the FDA. In 2010 the Government Accountability Office (GAO) concluded that a “growing number of substances … may effectively be excluded from federal oversight.” Is this a problem? The answer depends on whom you ask.
A Brief History of Regulation
Foods contain ingredients intentionally added for a specific purpose, such as vitamins, preservatives, flavorings, and colorings (“direct additives”) and those that are added unintentionally through processing, storage, or packaging (“food-contact substances” or “indirect additives”). The modern era of their regulation in the United States began when Congress passed the 1958 Food Additives Amendment to the 1938 FD&C Act, which mandated premarket approval and established safety standards.The 1958 amendment prohibits the FDA from considering an ingredient’s benefits during the approval process, only how safe it is. It also includes the Delaney Clause, which bans any ingredient that has been shown to cause cancer to animals or humans at any dose. Pesticide residues were originally included in the Delaney Clause but were removed with the 1996 Food Quality Protection Act. A separate amendment in 1960 mandated premarket approval for all color additives, both synthetic colors (e.g., FD&C Blue 2) and “natural” colors derived from animal, vegetable, and mineral sources (e.g., cochineal extract).The FDA regulates colors separately from other additives. The FDA currently certifies nine synthetic dyes—FD&C Blue 1, Blue 2, Green 3, Red 3, Red 40, Yellow 5, Yellow 6, Citrus Red 2 (used only on orange peels), and Orange B (which is no longer used because of safety concerns but is not banned). Although called “coal-tar dyes,” synthetic colors are now made from petroleum; the FDA certifies each batch to ensure it meets quality standards. The FDA also allows a number of natural colors, such as carmine, annatto, turmeric, beta-carotene, and caramel color, which do not receive agency certification. Companies must petition the FDA to create and use new color additives.A company’s petition to use a new food additive must contain information on its intended effect, the foods it will be used in, and estimated consumption levels, as well as data on the substance’s safety, usually in the form of acute and long-term toxicity studies. From these data, the FDA develops an acceptable daily intake value, usually based on the dose found to cause no adverse effect in animals, multiplied by a safety factor.Even as the 1958 amendment created a strict safety standard for regulated additives, it exempted “prior-sanctioned” substances, which had already been approved for use in food, and substances that are “generally recognized as safe,” or GRAS. GRAS determinations are based on scientific data, expert knowledge, and a history of common and apparent safe use of the substance in food. The FDA defines “safe” as “a reasonable certainty in the minds of scientists that the substance is not harmful under its intended conditions of use.” A GRAS substance is considered safe for specific intended uses in food with no review by the FDA unless data emerge that suggest a need to reconsider its safety.“Percentage-wise, flavors make up the largest number of GRAS ingredients in food,” says Mitchell Cheeseman, former acting director of the FDA’s Office of Food Additive Safety. Companies add flavorings of natural or synthetic origin to restore a food’s inherent or expected flavor, or to enhance it, because flavors present in unprocessed foods often change during processing.Food labels need not include a flavoring’s chemical name or a complete listing of all the flavors present, says Cheeseman. “Part [of the reason] is protecting the industry’s trade secret formulations and part is that the label would be substantially longer than it is for most foods.” The U.S. Department of Agriculture National Organic Program disallows artificial flavors in certified organic foods but allows nonorganic natural flavorings.Companies have the authority to make their own GRAS determinations using a panel of qualified experts to review safety data. Each company then has the option—but not the requirement—of notifying the FDA of its panel’s findings. Beginning in 1960, the Flavor and Extract Manufacturers Association (FEMA), a trade organization, established its own GRAS determination process, independent of the FDA. FEMA’s 120 member companies submit GRAS applications to the organization’s expert panel, which publishes its results in the trade journal Food Technology. FEMA has declared more than 2,600 flavoring substances GRAS.But a company can’t just declare any substance GRAS—“there needs to be a scientific process to determine risk,” says David Acheson, a food industry consultant who worked as the FDA’s associate commissioner of foods until 2009. According to the FDA, “the scientific data and information about the use of a substance must be widely known, and there must be a consensus among qualified experts that those data and information establish that the substance is safe under the conditions of its intended use.”
Authors: Donna McCann; Angelina Barrett; Alison Cooper; Debbie Crumpler; Lindy Dalen; Kate Grimshaw; Elizabeth Kitchin; Kris Lok; Lucy Porteous; Emily Prince; Edmund Sonuga-Barke; John O Warner; Jim Stevenson Journal: Lancet Date: 2007-11-03 Impact factor: 79.321
Authors: Lorne J Hofseth; James R Hebert; Anindya Chanda; Hexin Chen; Bryan L Love; Maria M Pena; E Angela Murphy; Mathew Sajish; Amit Sheth; Phillip J Buckhaults; Franklin G Berger Journal: Nat Rev Gastroenterol Hepatol Date: 2020-02-21 Impact factor: 46.802