- What is this GMO corn? Why does it exist?
This corn is a genetically modified organism (GMO) that was made in a laboratory to be immune from Roundup, a weed control chemical. If a farmer plants a field with this corn the entire field can be sprayed with Roundup to control weeds. Normal corn would be hurt by Roundup.
- What experiment was done?
Scientists in France fed rats different food for 2 years. The different groups were:
- Normal water and non-GMO corn (not treated with Roundup)
- Normal water and a mix of normal and GMO corn in 3 different fractions (not treated with Roundup)
- Normal water and a mix of normal and GMO corn in 3 different fractions (Treated with Roundup)
- Water with different levels of Roundup in it and non-GMO corn (not treated with Roundup)
The researchers took blood samples from the rats periodically to study their health and studied the rats' organs after the rats died.
- Did the GMO corn have an effect?
This is where science is hard. The answer isn't a clear yes or no - it has lots of caveats and statistics. Female rats died earlier from GMO corn (with or without Roundup) and earlier from Roundup alone. Male rats don't show as strong of an effect. Tumors usually developed earlier in female rats, especially when drinking roundup directly.
But not all of the data make sense. For instance, blood chemicals were used to look for evidence of kidney failure. The results look bad for GMO corn only and Roundup only, but the GMO corn with roundup doesn't show a measurable effect.
What about the criticisms and responses? Many of the responses particularly frustrated me:
- Each group was only 10 rats. That isn't big enough to see anything!
- These were a special type of rat that gets cancer easily. Of course they got cancer!
- The health problems didn't increase with increasing dose. So this is just random variation, not causality.
- Other studies have shown that GMO's are safe
Biology is really hard, and it is super expensive to take care of and monitor 200 rats for 2 years. This is a HUGE study compared to what I see in pre-clinical cancer research. This study could be used to get funding for a much bigger study, but studies don't get much bigger than this.
These are the epitome of white lab rats. It made perfect sense to use these.
It could be a threshold effect - there is a dose window where it increases, but above that there is no change. This is relatively common and makes sense - after all, taking 10 times a normal dose of medicine won't make you 10 times better...
This is true. But, this study has gone longer and looked at more variables than some other studies have. Additionally, you should ask how many of the "other studies" were funded by Monsanto or other groups that want to show GMO's are safe. I'm not saying the other studies are all bad, but each study needs to be evaluated individually rather than counting the number results that say "effect" versus "no effect".
These types of GMO crops are relatively new and it is possible there could be health effects we don't yet understand. This study shouldn't cause you to panic and not eat corn, but more study is warranted.
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