NOTE: We were astonished to see that Food Standards Australia New  Zealand (FSANZ) is using a study by Velimirov et al (2008) to counter  the study by Seralini (item 1 below). Seralini's study found that GM  maize NK603 caused tumours, organ damage, and premature death in rats  fed over their lifespan. 
 
 Velimirov's study, which was commissioned by the Austrian government,  found that the NK603xMON810 stacked corn made mice less fertile when fed  over several generations. (Velimirov, A., Binter, C., Zentek, J. (2008). "Biological effects of  transgenic maize NK603xMON810 fed in long term reproduction studies in  mice." Familie und Jugend Report, Forschungsberichte der Sektion IV Band  3/2008.)
 
 The study met with the usual storm of attacks from the GMO lobby and was  withdrawn by the Austrian government after challenge by the European  Food Safety Authority (EFSA). 
 
 Thus Velimirov's study was not cited in the Earth Open Source report of evidence on GMO hazards, GMO Myths and Truths:
 http://earthopensource.org/index.php/executive-summary
 
 And Snell et al excluded it from their review of GM feeding trials,  which is much cited by GM proponents to show GMOs are safe (though it  doesn't): Snell, C., B. Aude, et al. (2011). "Assessment of the health impact of  GM plant diets in long-term and multigenerational animal feeding trials:  A literature review." Food and Chemical Toxicology.
 
 Now, however, FSANZ is using the withdrawn Velimirov study to defend the safety of GM corn against Seralini's study! 
 
 Velimirov didn't find increased tumours in the GM-fed mice and this is  the finding that FSANZ is 'cherry-picking' in its attempt to discredit  Seralini's findings. 
 
 But Velimirov was testing a different GMO (NK603xMON810 stacked corn) on  a different test animal (mouse). Also her study was a multigenerational  study to examine effects on reproductive performance, not a chronic  toxicity or carcinogenicity study. So unlike Seralini's study, it didn't  track time of tumour onset, size or aggression.
 
 It's a sign of the extreme desperation of the pro-GM lobby (including,  sadly, our 'regulators', who seem more anxious to defend their GM  approvals than investigate further) that they resort to citing a study  showing GM corn caused infertility in order to try to discredit another  study showing that GM corn caused tumours.
 
 The message that consumers should perhaps draw from FSANZ's ham-fisted  attempt to rescue Monsanto's GM corn is: eat GMOs and get cancer or  become infertile – it's one or the other!
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 Response to Seralini paper on the long term toxicity of a Roundup herbicide and a Roundup-tolerant genetically modified maize
 Food Standards Australia New Zealand (FSANZ)
 October 2012
 http://www.foodstandards.gov.au/consumerinformation/gmfoods/gmfactsheets/responsetosralinipap5676.cfm
 
 In September 2012 Professor Gilles Eric Seralini and co-authors  published a study suggesting laboratory rats fed genetically modified  (GM) corn NK603 and/or Roundup (glyphosate) had a shortened life span,  although apparently this was not proportional to the treatment dose.
 
 The shortest lifespan was observed among rats consuming the lowest  concentration of NK603 corn (11%) in the feed. The reduced lifespan was  also associated with a high rate of tumours (cancer) in some of the test  groups. The authors also reported adverse effects in the kidneys and  disturbances in some plasma hormone levels.
 FSANZ’s preliminary assessment
 
 The relevance of the reported findings and conclusions drawn is limited  because of a number of methodological and interpretive limitations.
 
 Key limitations include the small number of animals in each test group,  selective reporting of data, and no acknowledgement of the well-known  spontaneous occurrence of mammary tumours in this strain of female rats.
 
 The claimed toxicity of Roundup is implausible and doesn't align with  extensive data from well designed and conducted long-term studies that  used the active ingredient of Roundup; glyphosate, in multiple species  (i.e. mice, rats, rabbits and dogs) at higher doses where no effects  were observed.
 
 Although the authors claimed that the maize line NK603 had not  previously been tested in a long-term feeding study in rodents, a  long-term feeding study using mice was conducted in 2008 using  transgenic maize (NK603xMON810). This study  Velimirov, et al, (2008)   was funded by the Austrian Government.
 
 In contrast to Seralini et al. (2012), Velimirov et al. applied  appropriate statistical tests to similar sized test groups in order to  conclude that "no differences were found in the inter group comparison".  They went on to state that "long term studies may have limitations as  the majority of outbred or inbred strains develop different forms of  cancer. Thus diet-related differences could be masked and not really  assessed".
 
 Next steps
 
 There is insufficient data in this published paper to enable a complete  analysis. FSANZ will ask the authors to provide a copy of the original  data for review. Once this data becomes available FSANZ will undertake a  comprehensive analysis in order to determine if amendment to the  current approval of NK603 maize is required.
FSANZ uses withdrawn study to defend GM corn against Seralini's findings
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