Rats fed GM corn due for sale in Britain
developed abnormalities in blood and kidneys
by The Independent
Rats fed on a diet rich in genetically modified corn developed
abnormalities to internal organs and changes to their blood, raising
fears that human health could be affected by eating GM food.
The Independent on Sunday can today reveal details of secret
research carried out by Monsanto, the GM food giant, which shows
that rats fed the modified corn had smaller kidneys and variations
in the composition of their blood.
According to the confidential 1,139-page report, these health
problems were absent from another batch of rodents fed non-GM
food as part of the research project.
The disclosures come as European countries, including Britain,
prepare to vote on whether the GM-modified corn should go on sale
to the public. A vote last week by the European Union failed to
secure agreement over whether the product should be sold here,
after Britain and nine other countries voted in favour.
However, the disclosure of the health effects on the Monsanto
rats has intensified the row over whether the corn is safe to
eat without further research. Doctors said the changes in the
blood of the rodents could indicate that the rat's immune system
had been damaged or that a disorder such as a tumour had grown
and the system was mobilising to fight it.
Dr Vyvyan Howard, a senior lecturer on human anatomy and cell
biology at Liverpool University, called for the publication of
the full study, saying the summary gave "prima facie cause
for concern".
Dr Michael Antoniu, an expert in molecular genetics at Guy's
Hospital Medical School, described the findings as "very
worrying from a medical point of view", adding: "I have
been amazed at the number of significant differences they found
[in the rat experiment]."
Although Monsanto last night dismissed the abnormalities in rats
as meaningless and due to chance, reflecting normal variations
between rats, a senior British government source said ministers
were so worried by the findings that they had called for further
information.
Environmentalists will see the findings as vindication of British
research seven years ago, which suggested that rats that ate GM
potatoes suffered damage to their health. That research, which
was roundly denounced by ministers and the British scientific
establishment, was halted and Dr Arpad Pusztai, the scientist
behind the controversial findings, was forced into retirement
amid a huge row over the claim.
Dr Pusztai reported a "huge list of significant differences"
between rats fed GM and conventional corn, saying the results
strongly indicate that eating significant amounts of it can damage
health. The new study is into a corn, codenamed MON 863, which
has been modified by Monsanto to protect itself against corn rootworm,
which the company describes as "one of the most pernicious
pests affecting maize crops around the world".
Now, however, any decision to allow the corn to be marketed in
the UK will cause widespread alarm. The full details of the rat
research are included in the main report, which Monsanto refuses
to release on the grounds that "it contains confidential
business information which could be of commercial use to our competitors".
A Monsanto spokesman said yesterday: "If any such well-known
anti-biotech critics had doubts about the credibility of these
studies they should have raised them with the regulators. After
all, MON 863 isn't new, having been approved to be as safe as
conventional maize by nine other global authorities since 2003."