Acrylamide Poisoning
Cancer from Overcooked Carbohydrates?
News headlines on Thursday, June 16, 2005
warned that a 1-ounce serving of potato chips eaten daily
exceeds safety levels for a recently discovered
cancer-causing substance known as acrylamide � therefore
these foods made by Lay's, Kettle Chips, Cape Cod and
Pringles should require a cancer warning under California�s
anti-toxics law � Proposition 65.1
The
instigating report from the Oakland-based Environmental Law
Foundation followed an analysis of 12 varieties of chips.
One variety, Cape Cod Robust Russet, contained 6.5 parts per
million, which is 910 times more acrylamide than the level
that the state's environmental health agency has determined
to be an unacceptable risk. What�s unacceptable? Some
of the chips tested pose a risk of one or two cancers per
1000 people, which �everyone agrees is unacceptable.� The
lowest acrylamide levels among the 12 tested were found in
Lay's Light KC Masterpiece BBQ chips, but they still
contained 38 times the amount that the state considers
acceptable.1
This is not the first time environmental
groups have filed similar notices with the California state
government about acrylamide in our foods. In 2002, an
attempt was made to require Burger King and McDonald's to
place warnings on French fries because of the acrylamide.
That case has been stayed by a Superior Court judge pending
a decision from the state's Office of Environmental Health
Hazard Assessment on rules related to acrylamide.1

Can Cooked Carbohydrates Be Made Safer?
Consistent
with the clich� �time is money,� fast cooking at high
temperatures means more profits for companies that are known
for their �fast and convenient foods.� Unfortunately, their
methods of frying, baking, roasting, and grilling also put
the consumer at risk. Rapid heating to high temperatures of
an amino acid, asparagine (found in all foods) in
combination with the common sugars (found in plant-foods),
results in the formation of acrylamide.2 Cooking
temperatures above 185 degrees centigrade (365 degrees
Fahrenheit) readily produce this unwanted substance.2,3
Most importantly, acrylamide cannot be detected in unheated
and boiled foods, because the minimal temperature to cause
this conversion is 120 degrees centigrade.2,3
(Boiling takes place at 100� C, 212� F).
Common Cooking Temperatures
Boiling |
100�
C (212�
F) |
Steaming (sea level) |
100�
C (212�
F) |
Steaming (at 5000 ft.) |
95�
C (203�
F) |
Pressure Cooker |
121�
C (250�
F) |
Roasting (coffee) |
190�
C (374�
F) to 220�
C (428�
F) |
Roasting (peanuts) |
160�
C (320�
F) |
Frying |
150�
C (302�
F) to 230�
C (446�
F) |
Baking (bread crust) |
120�
C (248�
F) |
|
|
Acrylamide forms |
120�
C (248�
F)
|
In this
highlighted case of potato chips, manufacturers can reduce
(but not eliminate) acrylamide levels by changing how the
chips are processed � that is cooking them at lower
temperatures and lengthening their cooking times. Even
without the acrylamide, these greasy chips still promote
cancer by other well-known mechanisms, such as excess
calories, immune-system suppression from vegetable fats, and
cellular damage caused by trans-fats.
What is
Acrylamide?
Acrylamide
is a white, crystalline, odorless substance used in a
variety of industries.2 The most common uses are
to purify drinking water and for sewage treatment � removing
particulate matters by combining with solid impurities
making them more easily filtered out of the water.
Acrylamide is also used to make dyes, cosmetics, food
packaging materials (like paperboard), soil-conditioning
agents, plastics, and grouting agents. In each of these
uses, some of the original acrylamide remains in the
finished product. Also, acrylamide is known to be a
component of cigarette smoke.

The
Discovery of Acrylamide in Foods
Swedish
tunnel workers exposed to large amounts of acrylamide from a
water sealant in 1997 were studied and compared to unexposed
people.4 Surprisingly, the control group �those
who had not been exposed to acrylamide at work � showed
unexpectedly high levels of acrylamide in their bodies.
This caused investigators to look for other sources of this
agent besides industrial pollutants. By 2002, research led
to the discovery of this substance in the diet of the
workers.
The main food sources were found to be French fries, potato
chips, tortilla chips (fried), bread crusts, crisp breads,
baked goods, cereals, and coffee. Up to 40% of all foods
contain acrylamide.
Note that acrylamide in food is not
the result of contamination from environmental sources, but
rather from heating foods containing sugars (carbohydrates)
and protein. Because acrylamide formation can be the result
of traditional cooking methods it is believed to have been
present in cooked foods for thousands of years, and
acrylamide levels in cooked organic foods would not be
expected to be any different than levels in cooked foods
that are not organic.
Acrylamide values in selected food product (ppb)5,6 |
French fries |
|
McDonald's French fries |
497 |
Popeye�s French fries |
1030
|
Wendy's French fries |
302
|
|
|
Potato chips |
|
Lay's Classic Potato Chips |
549
|
Kettle Chips Lightly Salted Natural Gourmet Potato |
1265
|
|
|
Commercial Potatoes |
|
KFC
Mashed Potatoes |
<10 |
Idaho Spuds Mashed Potatoes |
0
|
|
|
Other Boiled foods: |
|
Spaghetti |
0 |
Rice |
0 |
|
|
Breads |
|
Pepperidge Farm Dark Pumpernickel (not toasted) |
34
|
Pepperidge Farm Dark Pumpernickel (toasted) |
364
|
Sara
Lee Plain Mini Bagels (not toasted) |
58
|
Sara
Lee Plain Mini Bagels (toasted) |
343
|
|
|
Bakery products |
|
Dare
Breton Thin Wheat Crackers |
300 |
Wasa
Original Crispbread Fiber Rye |
504
|
Utz
White Corn Tortillas |
111
|
|
|
Cereals |
|
General Mills Cheerios |
266 |
General Mills Lucky Charms |
176
|
Kellogg's Corn Flakes |
77 |
Kellogg's Raisin Bran |
156 |
Oatmeal Porridge |
0 |
|
|
Snack foods |
|
Orville Redenbacher's Gourmet Popping (Popcorn) |
157
|
Herr's Extra Thin Pretzels |
309
|
Snyder's of Hanover Veggie Crisps |
832
|
Terra Stix |
990
|
Blue
Diamond Smokehouse Almonds |
457
|
Planters Smoked Almonds |
339
|
Smucker's Natural Creamy Peanut Butter |
125
|
Ghirardelli Unsweetened Cocoa |
316
|
Hershey's Cocoa |
909 |
Good
Health Natural Foods Honey Dijon |
1168
|
Lipton Recipe Secrets Onion Soup & Dip Mix |
1184
|
|
|
Coffee |
|
Maxwell House Slow Roast (ground, not brewed) |
209 |
Maxwell House Instant Coffee (powder, not brewed) |
263 |
Starbuck�s Coffee Columbia Ground (not brewed) |
175 |
|
|
Dairy and Meats |
|
Almost undetectable in most products. Those
prepared with flour coatings and then fried would
have acrylamide from the carbohydrates in the
batter. |
Chicken-bits |
39 |
Deep fried fish |
39 |
|
|
Note: High Heat Frying, Baking and Roasting Means
Acrylamide |
|
|
Values in parts per billion (ppb),
but these values are similar to micrograms/Kg
|
Health Hazards of Acrylamide
In large
doses, following long-term administration, this substance
can damage the nervous system, impair fertility, harm
genetic material, and induce the formation of tumors in
experimental animals. Cancers of the thyroid gland, female
breast tissues, male testicles, and mouth are most common.4
Because acrylamide
causes cancer in laboratory animals in high doses, it is
considered a potential human carcinogen.
The WHO
estimates the lifelong (70 years) risk of cancer for people
who consume 1 microgram/Kg a day is about 1 in 1000.7
A research group from
Stockholm
University and the National Food Administration (NFA) found
one microgram of acrylamide in just half a gram of crisps
(potato chips) or two grams of french fries. Estimates are
that people typically eat an average of 35-40 micrograms a
day of acrylamide.8
1 microgram acrylamide/kg body weight (of the
person) daily and the lifetime risk for cancer.7 |
|
4.5 per 1000 (by the U.S. EPA)
|
|
0.7 per 1000 (by the WHO)
|
|
10 per 1000 (by Stockholm University)
|
However, there are uncertainties about the
impact of acrylamide on human health, because
investigations of populations of people have, so far, failed
to confirm or disprove that this substance causes cancer in
humans.9
Furthermore, there is not enough information to rule out
the possibility that subtle effects can occur on the
developing nervous system of the fetus at even lower doses
than studied.
Is Anything Safe to Eat?
One reason
this issue has reached national headlines, is that
�people love to hear good news about their bad habits.� They
think, since everything causes cancer, why should I bother
to give up my cheese cake and chicken-fried steaks? People
falsely believe they can now forgo eating their vegetables
since this acrylamide revelation now makes, in their minds,
potatoes a larger health hazard than red meat. This
conclusion is false � and believing so puts you at great
risk for common cancers of the breast, prostate and colon,
and other health problems like heart disease, diabetes and
obesity.
Grilling is
usually reserved for cooking meat � a health-conscious
person consumes meat only on special occasions in small
amounts. Just because cooking meat produces no acrylamide,
does not mean meat is off the hook as a health hazard.
Cooking meat has been recognized for decades to produce many
very powerful cancer-causing substances including
heterocyclic amines, N-nitroso compounds (nitrosamines) and
polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (benzopyrene).10,11
Every
respectable health organization and nutritionist has told
people for the past four decades that the secret to good
health and disease avoidance is to eat a diet made up
largely of fruits and vegetables. Nothing has changed with
this acrylamide scare. However, there is an important lesson
to relearn with this headline: Do not damage your foods by
overheating them.
Minimizing
Acrylamide Exposure
In practical
terms, don�t eat French fries, baked chips, and potato
chips. Don�t drink coffee since this beverage is made from
roasted beans. Does this advice sound familiar? Tea, even
black tea with caffeine, is made by low-temperature drying
processes, not roasting and therefore would have
undetectable acrylamide levels. (See my July 2004: �Coffee
- Pleasure or Pain,� and October 2004: �Tea Time Increases
Life Time.�)
In general,
there is a 10-fold difference in the amount of acrylamide
between normal cooked and overcooked foods.4
Therefore, foods will always be safe with boiling and
steaming, because the maximum temperature reached is only
100 degrees centigrade (212 F) � below the 120 degrees
centigrade required to begin formation of this toxin.2,3
Microwaving will also be safe from acrylamide formation
with low the temperatures reached by this method � but more
research needs to be done on the safety of microwave
cooking.
Eat
fruits and vegetables uncooked whenever it is practical.
Legumes (beans, peas, and lentils) and grains are
traditionally prepared in boiling water. Steam or boil
potatoes and green and yellow vegetables. Pressure cooking
should also be safe; as would pan-frying your vegetables on
a dry non-stick skillet. All of these methods keep the
foods below 120 degrees centigrade. When baking breads or
casseroles, using lower temperatures for longer periods will
produce less acrylamide. Removing the crust from
commercial breads
will also reduce acrylamide exposure.
Always focus
on the fact that our common cancers, breast, prostate, and
colon, are rare in populations whose diets are based on
cooked starches and vegetables, such as the rice-eating
Japanese. These people, living on their traditional diet,
enjoy the world�s record for longevity and also have almost
no heart disease, type-2 diabetes, or obesity. Obviously,
any acrylamide formed in their foods has had no serious
impact on their robust lives.
References:
1)
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/state/la-me-potato17jun17,1,47365.story?coll=la-news-state
2) Friedman
M. Chemistry, biochemistry, and safety of acrylamide. A
review.
J Agric Food Chem. 2003 Jul 30;51(16):4504-26.
3) Tareke
E. Analysis of acrylamide, a carcinogen formed in heated
foodstuffs. J Agric Food Chem. 2002 Aug
14;50(17):4998-5006.
4) Fleck
F. Experts launch action on acrylamide in staple foods.
BMJ. 2002 Jul 20;325(7356):120.
5)
http://www.mindfully.org/Food/Acrylamide-Foods-FDA4dec02.htm.
6)
http://www.konsumentverket.se/html-sidor/livsmedelsverket/engakryltabell.htm
7)
http://www.konsumentverket.se/html-sidor/livsmedelsverket/engakrylcancerstudier.htm
8)
http://www.konsumentverket.se/html-sidor/livsmedelsverket/engakrylkonsumtion.htm
9) Hagmar
L, Tornqvist M. Inconclusive results from an
epidemiological study on dietary acrylamide and cancer.
Br J Cancer. 2003 Aug 18;89(4):774-5.
10) Bingham
SA. High-meat diets and cancer risk. Proc Nutr Soc.
1999 May;58(2):243-8.
11)
Jagerstad M, Skog K. Genotoxicity of heat-processed foods.
Mutat Res. 2005 Jul 1;574(1-2):156-72.
|