Cancer risk or no, diet soda is bad for you

THERE were good reasons to avoid products with the artificial sweetener aspartame even before the World Health Organization (WHO) as a 鈥減ossible carcinogen鈥 last week. But now diet soda drinkers might really want to put down the can.
But first, some perspective: 鈥淧ossible carcinogen鈥 is the weakest of into which WHO classifies anything that鈥檚 been even remotely tied to cancer in any kind of study. The organization labels substances with more serious links to cancer as 鈥減robable carcinogens鈥 and if the evidence is really strong, 鈥渃arcinogenic to humans.鈥听 That middle category includes things that many of us consume routinely, including alcoholic beverages and (which have been linked to esophageal cancer).
The evidence behind possible carcinogens is more tenuous. The low-frequency radiation emitted from cell phones is in that category because studies have suggested with cancer in animals.
In the case of aspartame, some show rats fed high doses of aspartame are more likely to get brain cancer and several other malignancies. Adding to the concern, a followed more than 100,000 people in France and found a possible small increased cancer risk in heavy users of artificial sweeteners.
But studies like this can鈥檛 prove that the sweeteners caused cancer. It鈥檚 possible that the group consuming more sweeteners also ate more processed food, or were more obese, or there was some other link.
A better way to get information would be to treat the humans more like the lab rats 鈥 feeding some people aspartame and comparing them to control groups. And now someone has done that, setting up what鈥檚 known as a randomized controlled trial. wasn鈥檛 set up to find a cancer link, but it did connect artificial sweeteners with the same risks associated with sugar.
Several other studies have linked aspartame, in particular, to , and in the longer term, to higher blood sugar and . Perhaps there鈥檚 just no risk-free soda.
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval of aspartame in 1981 was mired in political controversy. was chief executive, president, and chairman of the company that makes aspartame, G.D. Searle & Co. 鈥 and was at the same time part of Ronald Reagan鈥檚 transition team. (Rumsfeld had by then already served as defense secretary under President Gerald Ford, a role he reprised for President George W. Bush.)
As soon as he was elected, Reagan appointed a new FDA head who reportedly stacked a scientific panel to push through aspartame鈥檚 approval. Today aspartame is in diet drinks, gum, ice creams, puddings, cereals and other packaged foods marketed as sugar-free. Would it have been approved if not for Rumsfeld鈥檚 influence? Maybe.
Massive waves of death did not follow the infusion of aspartame into the US diet, but at the same time, there was no improvement in rising rates of obesity or Type 2 diabetes. Fake sugar hasn鈥檛 made America healthier. That randomized controlled trial helps explain why.
The study, published in 2022 in the journal , compared six groups, four consuming each of four different artificial sweeteners and two control groups. The sweeteners were Sucralose, Aspartame, Stevia, and Saccharine. One control group got no sweetener and the other got a tiny amount of real sugar, the same amount added to artificial sweetener sachets to offset their bitter aftertaste.
The study鈥檚 leader, Eran Elinav of the Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel, told me he was interested in exploring the possibility that the artificial sweeteners were interfering with the community of microbes that live in our guts 鈥 the microbiome. To start with, he said, he wanted to find volunteers who did not already consume any artificial sweeteners, and after screening more than 1,300 people, he had to narrow it down to 120 subjects whose systems were sufficiently pristine.
The two control groups showed no changes in their microbiome composition or their blood sugar control. The four groups that got artificial sweeteners showed changes in both after just two weeks of consuming an amount similar to what consumers might get drinking a couple of diet sodas a day.
The point, Elinav said, is that these substances aren鈥檛 鈥渋nert鈥 鈥 they don鈥檛 just pass harmlessly through the body. (Inert is the same term many chemists used to describe PFAS, now often called 鈥,鈥 which have also been linked to health problems.)
His results, he said, were interesting because the subjects getting the sweeteners reacted very differently, some showing almost no change and others substantial changes in microbial communities and blood sugar.
Even a low probability of risk might be enough reason for some people to switch to water or unsweetened drinks, given the way recent studies cast doubts on any metabolic benefit.
What should people with a sweet tooth do? Elinav said he absolutely does not want people to interpret his study to say they should switch back to drinks heavily sweetened with regular sugar or corn syrup. These are tied to all sorts of health problems, .
But it鈥檚 impossible to prove beyond doubt that anything, even cell phones, will never cause anyone, anywhere, to get cancer. So we have to weigh the risks and benefits. When I interviewed American Cancer Society head Otis Brawley about cell phones, he acknowledged the possibility of a link, but we were both talking on our cell phones at the time. When I talked to Elinav, he wasn鈥檛 drinking a diet soda 鈥 and he told me he opts for water.
BLOOMBERG OPINION


