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Below is a letter from Robert Vint to Prof Mike Gasson from early December 2004, querying "the almost total absence of long-term, independent, published, peer-reviewed studies of the effects of feeding GM foods to humans or animals."

Robert writes, "I received a reply on 13th June. It came after 2 reminders from me, 2 from my MP (Anthony Steen, Totnes) and the threat of a PQ [Parliamentary Question] asking why there was no reply. [In his reply Gasson's] ...basically trying to argue the case against the one kind of trial that could prove dangers or identify unsuspected or generic problems with GM foods."

Professor Gasson is Head of Food Safety Science at the Institute of Food Research, a member of the Government's Advisory Committee on the Microbiological Safety of Food (ACMSF) and since September 2003 he has been Chair of the Advisory Committee on Novel Foods and Processes (ACNFP). He also served on the UK Government's GM science review panel. Gasson is also a member of the European Food Safety Authority's GMO Panel.

Gasson is a consultant to Danisco Venture - a venture capital company that invests in biotechnology companies. It is also part of Danisco, which together with Monsanto wants to market GM fodder beet in the EU. He also has shares in Novacta a pharmaceutical and biotechnology company. Friends of the Earth Europe has questioned whether scientists like Gasson who have financial links to biotech companies should be participating in the decisions being made about GM foods. (Throwing caution to the wind)
http://www.foeeurope.org/GMOs/publications/EFSAreport.pdf

For more on Gasson: http://www.gmwatch.org/profile1.asp?PrId=176&page=G
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1.GM FOOD SAFETY RESEARCH - Why has it not taken place?
GENETIC FOOD ALERT
A Campaign of the UK Wholefood Trade
Hope House, 75a High Street, Totnes TQ9 5PB
6th December 2004

Dear Professor Gasson,

GM FOOD SAFETY RESEARCH - Why has it not taken place?

As I was unfortunately unable to participate in the recent ACNFP open day I hope that I can address in writing the matter that I had hoped to raise on that occasion.

Browsing through the latest three editions of the British Journal of Nutrition I found quite a few feeding studies assessing the effects of whole foods on animals (usually without harming them) or on human volunteers. One looked at the effects of Jarlsberg cheese on blood serum levels in 22 human volunteers. Another assessed the effects of a new barley variety on cholesterol levels in pigs. A third looked at the effect of Camembert cheese on intestinal microbiota in rats. A fourth compared the effects of whole milk and fermented milk on eight human volunteers. A fifth investigated effects of sesame oil on rats. A sixth assessed the effects of pearl barley on starch digestion in piglets.

The latest edition of the (American) Journal of Nutrition likewise reports on the effects of the Traditional Mediterranean Diet on Obesity in a Spanish Population - involving over 3000 human volunteers. Also covered are the results of a three year study of the effects of an Ovo-Lacto Vegetarian Diet on pregnant women (involving over 100 volunteers). Also assessed were the effects of olive oil on men, raw peas on pigs, Soy Protein Isolate on rats and Flaxseed Protects on rabbits.

In the archives of both publications there are a vast number of such reports. As all these studies are published in academic journals they will have been peer reviewed and they are all available to the public and the scientific community for further independent evaluation. It is clear that professional nutritionists assess the long and short term effects of a wide variety of whole foods in this manner as a matter of course.

The safety of GM foods and the possible long-term effects on both humans and farm animals of eating them has been, as you will know only too well aware, a burning issue since late 1998 - the date of the "Pusztai Case". For the last five years over 200 non-governmental organisations, under the umbrella of the Five Year Freeze alliance, have been demanding a moratorium on GM foods until they have been demonstrated to be safe beyond reasonable doubt. Virtually the entire population of Europe has chosen not to eat such foods whilst such uncertainty remains. The entire insurance industry has failed to obtain access to reassuring research data and so have advised their members to add exclusion clauses to avoid liability for any health effects of GM foods. The European food industry has decided not to use such ingredients. None of them want to know about gene expression or substantial equivalence, they want to know what happens when you eat the stuff year on year.

And yet survey after survey continues to confirm the almost total absence of long-term, independent, published, peer-reviewed studies of the effects of feeding GM foods to humans or animals. Major publications such as Science, Nature and the Lancet have reached similar conclusions, as has the Royal Society of Canada, a committee of Irish GPs and the EU-US Biotechnology Consultative Forum. I'm interested to find out why this research has not taken place.

One claim is that such research is unnecessary. It is claimed that US citizens have eaten GM crops for years without any effect. Yet during this period many health problems have increased in the USA (including soya and maize allergies) and these have cost the US medical service dearly. There has been no attempt to find out whether these correlate in any way with GM food consumption. There has been no post-release monitoring of the population. No coroner or doctor is in a position to record any symptoms, even death, as resulting from GM foods because no-one knows what symptoms there could be. Whether or not the products are safe they are being rejected by consumers and food manufacturers. Surely the economic impact of this alone indicates the necessity of such research.

Another claim is that such research is expensive - but surely the food manufacturers and importers and the major insurance companies can afford to pay for independent research that could open up an entire new market to them? After all, the examples of research that I have listed above would not appear to be especially expensive. And how much will it cost the economy if we make the wrong decisions in the absence of such research?

Another claim (made verbally by GM industry lobbyists) is that such research would be 'Luddite' and 'anti-science' because it would slow or obstruct the introduction of food and crop biotechnology. Make of that claim what you wish! I for one am pro-science in the sense that I would like more rigorous safety research, not less.

Yet another claim is that no-one is interested in carrying out or publishing such research - yet it has been by far the most significant food controversy of the last decade. The UK Government was certainly interested enough at one point to employ Dr Pusztai to carry out its official feeding studies. At that time the Government felt that such long-term whole food feeding studies were possible, necessary and affordable. Why does the Government no longer think this?

At the time Dr Pusztai was sacked, silenced and publicly disgraced, a key argument used by the Government was that research was not valid until it was published and peer-reviewed (I refer to the time before Dr Pusztai had the research peer-reviewed and published in the Lancet, despite threats to the editor). Does this not strengthen the case for ensuring that the public and consumer groups, the food manufacturers and insurers have direct access to published and peer-reviewed feeding studies to provide reassurance? Yet the reality seems to be that the sacking of Dr Pusztai marks the final end of public GM safety research in the UK. The Government terminated the research programme, decided not to repeat or improve Dr Pusztai's experiments and has never since commissioned any such research.

Not only has such Government research been terminated but independent scientists wishing to carry out such research have been made to understand that their department or institute may lose funding if they are involved in 'irresponsible' research. Scientists have been denied access to the GM crop varieties and null cassette isotopes. Of the very few published papers on GM food safety that we have been able to identify, half were industry-funded and reported negative results, the other half were independent and all raised safety concerns. All the scientists raising concerns have subsequently been subjected to campaigns of intimidation or ridicule. The only two independent scientists on the Government's GM Science Review panel, Dr Andrew Stirling and Professor Carlo Leifert, were likewise threatened as a result of raising their concerns.

The two hundred or more organisations in the Five Year Freeze alliance have demanded a moratorium on GM foods until adequate research has been published to confirm its safety beyond resaonable doubt. My impression - and it is a widespread impression - is that the UK government and the biotech industry has instead decided that there will be a moratorium on the safety research until the products are on the shelves.

We would welcome reassurance that the ACNFP and related bodies are not trying to hide the facts and that such research will be published - because it must now be clear to you that there is no hope of these products ever being sold in Europe in the absence of public access to this data.

Yours sincerely,
Robert Vint,
Director
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2.The reply

13 June 2005

Dear Mr Vint

GM FOOD SAFETY RESEARCH

Thank you for your letter of 6 December regarding the use of animal studies in the safety assessment of GM foods. As described previously by the ACNFP Secretariat, your letter was discussed by the Committee at its meeting on 26 January. I apologise for the lengthy delay in replying to you. This was due to an oversight by the Committee Secretariat, coupled with the fact that staff in the relevant part of the Food Standards Agency were diverted to deal with other urgent food safety incidents.

In your letter you questioned why research on the safety of GM food has not been carried out on humans and animals, referring to a number of recent papers published in the British Journal of Nutrition and in the Journal of Nutrition reporting the effects of whole foods in animal feeding studies and in human studies.

In January, Committee members noted that feeding trials are an important tool under specific circumstances but re-iterated that there is no scientific justification for insisting that novel foods (including GM foods) should routinely be tested in this way. In some cases, feeding trials are in fact carried out in laboratory or farm animals by the company that has developed a GM crop. These are normally designed to test the precise nutritional qualities of the crop (eg maize grain) when used as a major part of an animal's diet, as small differences in feed efficiency can be of considerable economic importance to the animal feed industry. The Committee's view is that these studies may provide some limited confirmation that that foods derived from these crops are not overtly toxic, but they do not provide evidence of safety.

The papers highlighted in your letter reported on studies that were conducted to test specific hypotheses concerning the effects of the relevant foods and food ingredients. It would be reasonable to conduct similar studies in the case where a novel or GM food is plausibly anticipated to have a specific biochemical effect that is relevant to human health.

It has been accepted since the earliest discussions on testing of 'whole' foods that feeding trials with novel and GM foods are not a practical way of gathering evidence of their general safety. Instead, the safety evaluation focuses on detailed examination of the observed differences between the novel or GM food and its existing counterparts - for example by isolating novel constituents and testing them at high doses in animal models.

This approach has been confirmed at various times following reviews of the procedures for safety assessment of novel or GM foods. You may be interested to know that the value of animal feeding trials is currently being re-examined by the GMO Panel of the European Food Safety Authority, which is now responsible for GM food safety assessments in the European Union.

The ACNFP is not able to comment on other issues raised in your letter, such as the reference to campaigns to intimidate or ridicule scientists who have raised concerns over the safety of GM food or the suggestion that the Government has decided on a moratorium on safety research until GM foods are on the shelves,

Yours sincerely,
Mike Gasson