Aspartame consumption in relation to childhood brain tumor risk: results from a case-control study.

Journal of the National Cancer Institute
Q1
Jul 1997
Citations:81
Influential Citations:2
Observational Studies (Human)
80
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Methods
Population-based case-control study of pediatric brain tumors. Case patients: 56 individuals diagnosed with a primary brain tumor between 1984 and 1991 in 19 West Coast counties; Control subjects: 94 individuals frequency-matched by age at diagnosis, sex, study site, and birth year. Exposures assessed via in-person interviews with biological mothers of study children; data on child’s aspartame consumption prior to diagnosis and maternal consumption during pregnancy and breastfeeding (subset: 49 cases, 90 controls).
Results
No association between aspartame consumption and brain tumor risk in children. All-sources consumption: unadjusted OR 1.1 (0.6-2.4); adjusted OR 1.1 (0.5-2.6). Other exposure strata show ORs around 0.6–1.6 with wide CIs and no dose-response. Maternal consumption during pregnancy/breastfeeding also shows no clear association (ORs 0.6–1.1). Conclude there is little biologic or epidemiologic evidence that aspartame is a human brain carcinogen; findings are limited to pediatric tumors and may not generalize to adults.
Limitations
Small sample size (56 cases, 94 controls; 49 cases, 90 controls for maternal data); wide confidence intervals; retrospective exposure assessment via maternal recall; potential exposure misclassification could mask a weak effect; restricted to West Coast pediatric brain tumors; observational design.

Abstract

Brain cancer incidence rates in the United States have been increasing in both adults (1) and children (2). The possibility that aspartame, a widely ingested artificial sweetener, may be a cause of brain cancer in humans was suggested in a recent rep...