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Food additive may up lung cancer risk, study says

Foods containing a widely used additive may increase the growth of lung cancers or cause new tumors to develop, new research suggests.

Tumors were more plentiful in mice with lung cancer fed a diet containing 0.5 to 1 percent inorganic phosphates (equivalent to the 40 mg. that humans on average consume daily) for a month according to a study in next month's American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine. The tumors' mass increased by 14 percent in the mice fed the most phosphates.

Inorganic phosphates are chemicals added to a variety of processed foods including cheese, meat, beverages and bakery products to increase water retention and improve their texture. The additives may disrupt the regulation of cell growth in the lungs, causing tumors to develop, says Myung-Haing Cho, a veterinarian at Seoul National University who co-authored the study.

But Stephen Spiro, deputy chairman of the British Lung Foundation, is skeptical there's a human link. "Whilst this may be a relevant observation, it has never been assessed in man," he told BBC News, "and any recent increase in high phosphate ingestion due to excessive phosphates in processed foodstuffs would be likely to take many years before they could affect tumor development in humans."

Image by iStockphoto/shapecharge

Tags: lung cancer, cancer, food
More News Blog: Next: Multiple tiny earthquakes rattle Yellowstone. Could the big one be far behind? Previous: Parental rejection of gay teens worsens health

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  1. 1. Ralf123 03:01 PM 12/30/08

    >"and any recent increase in high phosphate ingestion due to excessive phosphates in processed foodstuffs would be likely to take many years before they could affect tumor development in humans."

    Yeah, why be cautious and not wait until it's too late?
    As far as I can remember, these placating responses tend to be wrong and the people who raised the warning were right in the majority of cases. Does anybody know of a study that looked at how often this is the case?

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  2. 2. SunnyJames in reply to Ralf123 04:36 PM 12/30/08

    I don't know of any particular study, but it seems like you may be able to estimate it using something like Google Zeitgeist. it would take some computerional linguistic prowess, but the data is there.

    I buy local and organic because they are less energy expensive, taste better, and don't contain industrial chemical crap. The key is organic AND local, otherwise you have no opportunity to actually visit the place where your food is produced.
    -SunnyJames, http://sunnyinsight.blogspot.com

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