Danone North America, Broomfield, CO, USA.
Flavor Producers, LLC, Sharonville, OH, USA.
Toxicol Appl Pharmacol. 2021 Dec 15;433:115779. doi: 10.1016/j.taap.2021.115779. Epub 2021 Oct 29.
The Delaney Clause of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act became law in 1958 because of concerns that potentially harmful chemicals were finding their way into foods and causing cancer. It states, "[n]o additive shall be deemed to be safe if it is found to induce cancer when ingested by man or animal, or if it is found, after tests which are appropriate for the evaluation of the safety of food additives, to induce cancer in man or animal." The United States Food and Drug Administration (US FDA) and United States Environmental Protection Agency (US EPA, prior to implementation of the Food Quality Protection Act) were charged with implementing this clause. Over 60 years, advances in cancer research have elucidated how chemicals induce cancer. Significant advancements in analytical methodologies have allowed for accurate and progressively lower detection limits, resulting in detection of trace amounts. Based on current scientific knowledge, there is a need to revisit the Delaney Clause's utility. The lack of scientific merit to the Delaney Clause was very apparent when recently the US FDA had to revoke the food additive approvals of 6 synthetic flavoring substances because high dose testing in animals demonstrated a carcinogenic response. However, US FDA determined that these 6 synthetic flavoring substances do not pose a risk to public health under the conditions of intended use. The 7th substance, styrene, was de-listed because it is no longer used by industry. The scientific community is committed to improving public health by promoting relevant science in risk assessment and regulatory decision making, and this was discussed in scientific sessions at the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) 2020 Annual Meeting and the Society of Toxicology (SOT) 2019 Annual Meeting. Expert presentations included advances in cancer research since the 1950s; the role of the Delaney Clause in the current regulatory paradigm with a focus on synthetic food additives; and the impact of the clause on scientific advances and regulatory decision making. The sessions concluded with panel discussions on making the clause more relevant based on 21st-century science.
联邦食品、药品和化妆品法案的德莱尼条款于 1958 年成为法律,因为人们担心潜在的有害化学物质会进入食品并导致癌症。该条款规定,“如果一种添加剂被发现摄入人体或动物后会致癌,或者经过适当的食品添加剂安全性评估测试后会在人体或动物中致癌,那么这种添加剂不得被视为安全。”美国食品和药物管理局(FDA)和美国环境保护署(EPA,在实施《食品质量保护法》之前)负责执行该条款。60 多年来,癌症研究的进展已经阐明了化学物质如何致癌。分析方法的显著进步使得能够进行更准确和逐步降低的检测限,从而检测到痕量物质。基于当前的科学知识,有必要重新审视德莱尼条款的效用。当最近 FDA 不得不撤销 6 种合成香料物质的食品添加剂批准时,德莱尼条款缺乏科学依据就变得非常明显,因为动物的高剂量测试显示出致癌反应。然而,FDA 认为,在预期用途的条件下,这 6 种合成香料物质不会对公众健康构成风险。第 7 种物质苯乙烯被除名,因为它已不再被工业界使用。科学界致力于通过在风险评估和监管决策制定中促进相关科学来改善公众健康,这在美国科学促进会(AAAS)2020 年年会和毒理学学会(SOT)2019 年年会上的科学会议上进行了讨论。专家介绍包括自 20 世纪 50 年代以来癌症研究的进展;德莱尼条款在当前监管模式中的作用,重点是合成食品添加剂;以及该条款对科学进步和监管决策的影响。会议最后进行了小组讨论,以根据 21 世纪的科学使该条款更加相关。