2012
DOI: 10.2903/j.efsa.2012.2986
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Final review of the Séraliniet al. (2012a) publication on a 2-year rodent feeding study with glyphosate formulations and GM maize NK603 as published online on 19 September 2012 in Food and Chemical Toxicology

Abstract: On 19 September 2012, Séralini et al. published online in the scientific journal Food and Chemical Toxicology a publication describing a 2‐year feeding study in rats investigating the health effects of genetically modified maize NK603 with and without Roundup WeatherMAX® and Roundup® GT Plus alone (both are glyphosate‐containing plant protection products). As requested by the European Commission, EFSA reviewed this publication taking into consideration assessments conducted by Member States and any clarificati… Show more

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Cited by 43 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Two additional published studies on glyphosate formulations, the first one on initiation-promotion in mice (George et al 2010) and the second one, a study of rats (Seralini et al 2014) that was retracted and republished creating some controversies (Fagan et al 2015), were considered inadequate by IARC and EFSA for carcinogenicity assessment (European Food Safety Authority 2012; IARC 2015). Consequently, industry-sponsored studies, required by several jurisdictions worldwide, have constituted the basis for the assessment of animal carcinogenicity by both IARC and EFSA.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Two additional published studies on glyphosate formulations, the first one on initiation-promotion in mice (George et al 2010) and the second one, a study of rats (Seralini et al 2014) that was retracted and republished creating some controversies (Fagan et al 2015), were considered inadequate by IARC and EFSA for carcinogenicity assessment (European Food Safety Authority 2012; IARC 2015). Consequently, industry-sponsored studies, required by several jurisdictions worldwide, have constituted the basis for the assessment of animal carcinogenicity by both IARC and EFSA.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Scientific community – with few exceptions (21) – replied with a quantity of opinions and response letters from top scientists, where the Seralini study was dismissed and a more solid peer-review system in scientific journals was claimed for (22). As for institutions deputed to safety evaluation, EFSA delivered its final statement (also in agreement with the independent assessments by organizations of Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, Italy, and the Netherlands) (23), which recommended rejection of this paper as scientifically unsound and stated a no need to re-examine its previous safety evaluations of maize NK603. Weaknesses in the methodology and experimental design, leading to misleading conclusions, were the basic faults assessed in this paper in particular deriving from the use of inappropriate animal line bearing a natural tumor formation rate of more than 50% and the minimal size of animal sample which was in contrast with the internationally recommended standards for a proper nutritional or toxicological assessment of a GM line.…”
Section: Controversial Casesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) of the European Commission had sharply criticized Séralini et al [2] and rejected its utility in a regulatory setting [35]. However, even before the paper was republished, the European Commission announced [36] that they would offer funding for research designed to test the observations of Séralini et al The French government also announced they would fund studies to follow-up Séralini et al [2].…”
Section: Safety Of Nk603 Glyphosate and Roundupcurrent Status Of Thementioning
confidence: 99%