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Aspartame, Methyleugenol, and Isoeugenol

IARC Monographs on the Identification of Carcinogenic Hazards to Humans Volume 134

IARC

2024

ISBN-13

978-928 -932-0291-2

Other languages

No other languages


View The Lancet Oncology summary as HTML or PDF

French version of The Lancet Oncology summary (hosted by Centre Léon Bérard)

Read the Joint summary of findings for aspartame

Read the Q&A for methyleugenol and isoeugenol

View the infographic

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This volume of the IARC Monographs provides evaluations of the carcinogenicity of three agents: aspartame, methyleugenol, and isoeugenol.

Aspartame is a low-calorie artificial sweetener that has been widely used in foods and beverages since the 1980s. Historically, artificially sweetened beverages have been the major source of exposure to aspartame, but to a lesser extent at present since aspartame is typically used in mixtures with other sweeteners. The highest concentrations of aspartame are found in tabletop sweeteners, chewing gums, and food supplements. Other sources include cosmetics and medicines.

Methyleugenol is a flavour and fragrance compound that occurs naturally in essential oils of various plants. It is used in cosmetics and personal care products and as an insect attractant. Although its use as a flavouring agent is prohibited in the European Union and the USA, it is still present in various foods and consumer products due to its natural occurrence in herbs and spices. The general population is ubiquitously exposed through the ingestion of food or use of personal care products.

Isoeugenol is a fragrance and flavour compound that occurs in many plant species and in wood smoke. It is used in food, cosmetics, household products, animal feed, and veterinary medicines. Firefighters and workers involved in isoeugenol synthesis or handling isoeugenol-containing products may be exposed.

An IARC Monographs Working Group reviewed evidence from epidemiological studies, cancer bioassays in experimental animals, and mechanistic studies to assess the carcinogenic hazard to humans of exposure to these agents and concluded that:

  • Aspartame and isoeugenol are possibly carcinogenic to humans (Group 2B);
  • Methyleugenol is probably carcinogenic to humans (Group 2A).

Cover (updated 12 September 2024)

Contents

Note to the Reader

List of Participants (updated 12 September 2024)

Preamble

General Remarks (updated 12 September 2024)

Aspartame (posted 29 April, updated 12 September 2024)

Methyleugenol (posted 12 September 2024)

Isoeugenol (posted 12 September 2024)

List of Abbreviations (updated 12 September 2024)

 

 

 

ANNEX 1. Supplementary material for Section 1, Exposure Characterization (updated 12 September 2024)

These supplementary tables are available online only.

Please report any errors to [email protected].

Aspartame

Table S1.1 Reported occurrence of aspartame in food

The following tables were produced in draft form by the Working Group and were subsequently fact-checked but not edited:

Aspartame

Table S1.2 Exposure assessment review and critique for epidemiological studies on cancer in humans exposed to aspartame

Table S1.3 Exposure assessment review and critique for mechanistic studies in humans exposed to aspartame

Isoeugenol

Table S1.4 Exposure assessment review and critique for mechanistic studies in humans exposed to isoeugenol

 

ANNEX 2. Scientific and other publicly available data on aspartame use in artificially sweetened beverages

 

ANNEX 3. Supplementary material for Section 2, Cancer in Humans

 

ANNEX 4. Supplementary material for Section 4, Evaluation of high-throughput in vitro screening data (updated 12 September 2024)

These supplementary online-only tables contain summaries of the findings (including the assay name, the corresponding key characteristic, the resulting “hit calls” both positive and negative, and any reported caution flags) for those chemicals evaluated in the present volume that have been tested in high-throughput screening assays performed by the United States Environmental Protection Agency (US EPA) and the United States National Institutes of Health. The results were generated by the Working Group using the software “kc-hits” (key characteristics of carcinogens – high-throughput screening discovery tool) available from https://gitlab.com/i1650/kc-hits.git (Reisfeld et al., 2022), using the US EPA Toxicity Forecaster (ToxCast) assay data and the curated mapping of key characteristics to assays available at the time of the evaluations performed for IARC Monographs Volume 134. Data were available for aspartame, methyleugenol, and isoeugenol.

Please report any errors to [email protected].

  1. Aspartame: ToxCast/Tox21 assay results mapped to the key characteristics of carcinogens
  2. Methyleugenol: ToxCast/Tox21 assay results mapped to the key characteristics of carcinogens
  3. Isoeugenol: ToxCast/Tox21 assay results mapped to the key characteristics of carcinogens