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Cancer
Report: Potato Chips, French Fries May Contain Cancer-Causing Substance
Report: Potato Chips, French Fries May Contain Cancer-Causing Substance
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STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) -- Potato chips, french fries, breakfast cereal, bread and other foods based on starch or sugar also contain a substance that may cause cancer, the National Food Administration said Tuesday.
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InteliHealth
2002-04-24
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Associated Press
2002-05-08
Associated Press

Report: Potato Chips, French Fries May Contain Cancer-Causing Substance
April 24, 2002

STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) -- Potato chips, french fries, breakfast cereal, bread and other foods based on starch or sugar also contain a substance that may cause cancer, the National Food Administration said Tuesday.

The substance, called acrylamide, forms when carbohydrates are heated such as by baking bread or frying potatoes, researchers claimed.

"The discovery that acrylamide is formed during the preparation of food ... is new knowledge," Leif Busk said. "It may now be possible to explain some of the cases of cancer caused by food."

Two of Sweden's national newspapers front-paged the story Tuesday ahead of the food agency's news conference, which was televised live to an interested, apparently nervous public. So many people tried to log onto the agency's website that it temporarily shut down.

Nevertheless, researchers did not quantify the apparent cancer risk and health officials didn't issue any restrictions on what or how much to eat, nor did grocery stores pull foodstuffs from shelves.

"Do not stop eating these foods, but beware of what you eat, eat more cooked food, more vegetables," said Lilianne Abramsson Zetterberg, a toxicologist with the government agency.

"I see this alarm as one among many," said Eva Buren, a spokeswoman for the grocery chain ICA. "Most of us know already that you should not eat a bag of chips a day."

The National Food Administration studied more than 100 foods and determined that "fried, oven-baked and deep-fried potato and cereal products may contain high levels of acrylamide."

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency describes acrylamide as white, odorless, flake-like crystals that are used mainly in treating drinking water and for industrial purposes. It can cause cancer in people exposed to high levels for a long period.

Swedish researchers said they believed their studies were the first to look at its creation and consumption in food.

The food agency said its data confirmed similar findings by researchers at Stockholm University.

Findings were being submitted to the 15-nation European Union for further study.

Swedish researchers estimated acrylamide could be responsible for several hundred of the 45,000 cancer cases in Sweden each year, based on experiments in which rats were fed fried food.

They declined to identify a specific type of cancer that could be caused by acrylamide, saying further study was needed.

Copyright 2002 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

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