The Bad Seed:
Health Risks of Genetically Modified Corn
Symptoms including
headaches, nausea, rashes, fatigue, Caitlin Shetterly visited doctor after
doctor searching for a cure for what ailed her. BY CAITLIN SHETTERLY JUL 24,
2013 7.9K
JON SHIREMAN/GETTY IMAGES
The office of allergist Paris Mansmann, MD, sits on a grassy slope
overlooking the Royal River, a wide waterway that originates in inland Maine
and winds down across farmland and under train tracks until it hits the coastal
town of Yarmouth, where it sloshes into the Atlantic Ocean. When I first came
to Mansmann in February 2011, the river was covered with ice, and bare trees
stood silver sentry on its shores. I was 36. I'd been sick for three and a half
years.
During that time, when I wasn't working as a writer
and theater director or being a wife and mother, I visited doctors and had
tests. I told few friends or members of my extended family how ill I was,
because I didn't have any way to explain what was wrong. I had no diagnosis,
just a collection of weird symptoms: tight, achy pain that radiated through my
body and caused me to hobble around (my ankles, I'd joke to my husband, Dan,
felt like they'd been "Kathy Batesed," à la the movie Misery); burning rashes that splashed across my cheeks and around my mouth
like pizza sauce; exhaustion; headaches; hands that froze into claws while I
slept and hurt to uncurl in the morning; a constant head cold; nausea; and, on
top of all that, severe insomnia—my body just could not, would not, turn off
and rest.
I visited every doctor who'd see me and tried everything they threw
at me: antidepressants; painkillers; elimination diets (including a long eight
months when I went without any of the major allergens, such as gluten, nuts,
dairy, soy, and nightshades); herbal supplements; iodine pills; steroid shots;
hormone treatments; Chinese teas; acupuncture; energy healing; a meditation
class—you name it, I did it. Nothing worked. After I maxed out the available
rheumatologists, endocrinologists, nutritionists, gastroenterologists, Lyme
disease specialists, acupuncturists, and alternative-medicine practitioners in
the Portland metropolitan area, I was sent to neurologists in Boston. All of my
tests came back normal.
In late 2010, after a long and unhappy
antibiotic treatment for Lyme disease, my newest GP (who's still my doctor
today), Chuck de Sieyes, MD, announced that he was referring me to Mansmann:
"Because I have no idea what's going on with you, and he's one of the
smartest guys around. And frankly, I've had it!"
Mansmann had moved to Yarmouth with his wife and
kids to be close to his parents, who'd retired in Maine. A third-generation
allergist, he worked in his father's allergy clinic, at Jefferson Medical
College in Philadelphia, during high school. While in college at Saint Joseph's
University, also in Philadelphia, he helped his dad develop two asthma drugs.
Later, he headed an allergy and immunology clinic at a West Virginia hospital
for 10 years.
Mansmann has a helmet of thick, graying hair and
an intensely serious air. After escorting me into an exam room, he sat down
across from me and promptly pushed aside my thick medical file. He'd read
through it all, he said, but he wanted to hear the story from me. He listened
patiently, asking questions every so often: When did my rashes flare? Was the
pain an ache in my muscles, or did it feel deeper? Was I worse after I slept or
at the end of the day? He seemed, as we spoke, to have all the time in the
world. Then, with no pyrotechnics, he offered his theory: "I think it's possible
you've developed a reaction to genetically modified corn."
Genetically modified corn? Everyone's heard of
GMO corn, but I realized I didn't know what it actually was. Mansmann explained
that starting in the mid-1980s, the biotechnology giant Monsanto began to
genetically alter corn to withstand its herbicide Roundup—the goal being to
eradicate weeds but not crops—as well as to resist a pest called the corn
borer. These small changes in the DNA of the corn are expressed by the plant as
proteins. It's those proteins, Mansmann believes, that can act as allergens,
provoking a multisystemic disorder marked by the overproduction of a type of
white blood cell called an eosinophil.
He swabbed inside my nose with a Q-tip, then
placed the results under a microscope. "Take a look," Mansmann said.
"See all those pink cells? Those are eosinophils." My nose, it
seemed, was chock-full of them. When the immune system is working properly, eosinophils
swarm certain invading substances, be they parasites or viruses, and work to
eliminate them. Sometimes, however, an allergenic protein may prompt the immune
system to release eosinophils. Then, it's as if a faucet gets turned on but
can't be turned off—eosinophils just keep coming. Eventually they begin to
leave the bloodstream and may infiltrate and damage the GI tract, esophagus,
mucous membranes, lungs, the fascial system (the layer of connective tissue
that surrounds the muscles, blood vessels, and nerves), and the skin—hence, the
avalanche of symptoms. (Some allergists say that the best way to test for a
true eosinophilic disorder is to look for the cells in the esophagus and GI
tract with an endoscopy. But Mansmann thinks that once you have a preponderance
of them in your nasal mucus, they're likely to be elsewhere.)
Mansmann's advice was to strip all corn, even
that marked organic, from my diet. "It's almost impossible to find a corn
source in the United States that doesn't have the [protein] in it," he
said. The U.S. government started approving GMO corn and soybeans for sale in
the mid-1990s, and today, 88 percent of corn, and 93 percent of soybeans, are
the transgenic varieties. Moreover, Mansmann and others contend that due to
cross-pollination via winds, birds, and bees, there's no such thing anymore as
a GMO-free corn crop. He estimated that it would take from two to four months
of living without corn for the eosinophils to cycle out of my body, and
almost a year before I'd feel entirely like
myself.
GETTY IMAGES
While I quickly discovered that blaming GMO
foods for any kind of health problem is controversial in the medical and
biotech worlds, what's beyond debate is the increase in the incidence of
autoimmune disorders such as type 1 diabetes, lupus, and celiac disease, as
well as of allergies. As for the latter, the National Health Interview Survey
found, for instance, that since 1999, the number of children with food
allergies has jumped by 50 percent, and those with skin allergies by 69 percent
(and the increase isn't merely a by-product of fuller reporting by parents,
experts say).
Allergenic eosinophilic disorders, however,
aren't counted in that data. They were first identified about 20 years ago,
according to a pioneer in the field, Marc Rothenberg, MD, PhD, a professor at
University of Cincinnati medical school and director of an affiliated center
for eosinophilic disorders. "We're in the midst of an allergy and
autoimmune epidemic," Rothenberg told me on the phone, "and the
environment is the black box." Mansmann's GMO theory was
"interesting," he went on, before quickly adding that "no one in
conventional medicine will have the data" to prove it.
Back in 2011, though, I was desperate enough
that I was willing to try the diet Mansmann recommended. After all, how hard
could it be to give up corn? The answer was: way harder than I imagined. Corn
was my Waldo, popping up everywhere: in tea bags, juice, and cheese culture; it
lined my "to go" coffee cups and plastic bags of frozen vegetables;
it coated my store-bought apples and was on the bottom of restaurant pizza—almost
everything my family used, no matter how piously natural and organic, had corn
in it. It came under the guise of dozens of names like "xanthan gum,"
"natural flavors," "free-flowing agents," "vitamin
E," "ascorbic acid," "citric acid," and
"cellulose," to name a few. Almost daily, I'd find a new culprit.
"Damn, this toothpaste is full of corn!" Then: "Wait, our dish
soap is made from corn!" Or: "Oh my God, iodized salt has dextrose in
it!"
Not to mention the corn that is fed to animals
whose meat and eggs I ate, whose milk I drank. I had to restrict my diet,
Mansmann said, to vegetables, grains other than corn, grass-fed beef and dairy,
wild fish, and game (if I was game). My husband and I threw ourselves into the
corn-free diet with gusto: We began baking all our bread, we learned how to
make our own flour tortillas and sweet treats like muffins and cakes. By luck,
we met an intrepid farmer raising corn-free chickens (harder than you might
guess, because chickens have literally been bred to get fat fast on corn). We
eschewed anything pre-made and began gathering foods from local sources we could
trust. I stopped taking every medicine or supplement with corn in it (which was
most of them). Wherever I went, I took my own stainless-steel coffee cup.
The first thing I noticed was that my skin
rashes began to dissipate. Then, slowly, my body stopped aching, and I could
walk or even jog easily, for the first time in years. I started to have more
energy, and I slept better at night. The head cold went away—poof—and I wasn't going through a box of tissues a day. My hands
became less stiff. I realized, in retrospect, that my frozen hands had been the
hardest symptom to tolerate: I could barely button my son's small shirts or
apply a Band-Aid, which made me feel useless as a mother. Almost four months
later, in late May, I felt pretty much like my old self. I was so startled by
my physical well-being that I didn't know how to enjoy it. Each night I'd go to
bed preparing myself for the possibility that I might wake up sick again the
next morning. Could GMO corn really be my problem? Could this blessed state
really last? I couldn't let go; I had to know more. I decided to visit
Rothenberg and his team of researchers endeavoring to crack open the black box.
When I landed in Cincinnati, it was sticky and
eerily airless, though it was early June and well after midnight. I couldn't
help but think about how one doctor had told me that the Ohio River Valley is
basically a bowl that collects pollen and pesticide sprays from across the
Midwest, creating a special kind of allergic hell.
The next morning, I made my way to Rothenberg's
lab. Despite wearing sneakers and khakis and sporting a "Hey, hey, we're
the Monkees" hairdo, Rothenberg exuded a scientist–rock star vibe—he moves
through the world with importance. Over the next couple of days, he told me,
I'd meet people whose views represented a microcosm of the worldwide debate
over the safety of GMOs.
First up: Karl von Tiehl, a young, cherub-faced
clinician and assistant professor in the medical school (he has since moved to
Los Angeles to go into private practice). Our interview had barely begun when
he informed me that my interest in the impact of big agriculture on the food
supply was a preoccupation of his as well. He told me that, for the very worst
patients who come to Cincinnati (those whose GI tracts and esophagi have been
so damaged by eosinophils that their lives are severely compromised), the team
has found that if they "give them a medical food that's been so chopped
and sliced and diced that there are no proteins in it, that it's just amino
acids, simple sugars, and small fats and stuff—there's nothing their immune
system can react to—95 percent of the time, the disease goes away as long as they
stay on that simple, horrible smelling, tasting formula." Von Tiehl
doesn't know if GMO crops are the culprit, but, he says, "you're eating
what somebody in some office has decided is good for you rather than what your
grandma would have told you is good for you. There's something scary
there."
A short walk down the hall, his colleague Amal
Assa'ad, MD, also a professor at the medical school, dismissed anxiety over
GMOs' safety as almost magical thinking. "What's wrong with
chemicals?" she asked. "We're so afraid of chemicals because they are
man-made, right? A lot of chemicals have helped us—a lot of medications are
chemicals." If anything, GMO foods have been a boon to mankind, Assa'ad
said. GMO seeds "produce better crops that have increased production, that
are resistant to pesticides—crops that can feed the rest of the world."
She echoed the federal government's
position—given voice through the regulatory policies of the USDA, the Food and
Drug Administration, and the Environmental Protection Agency—that there is
nothing inherently dangerous about inserting the gene of one species into that
of another, since the end product is essentially identical with that grown from
regular seeds. This is also, perhaps needless to say, the biotech industry's
stance. "There are several hundred studies that contribute to a huge body
of evidence that GM crops…are as safe as their conventional counterparts,"
says Monsanto spokesman Thomas Helscher.
To experiment with a new GMO food in this
country, a developer must first get a permit from the USDA to conduct field
trials (literally, trials in open fields), following guidelines largely
intended to prevent GMO crops from mixing with conventional ones. In addition,
according to Helscher, biotech firms like Monsanto are required to compile a
document that compares the biology of the modified plant to the unmodified one,
determining, for example, if there is a "statistically significant
difference" in the levels of nutrients such as carbs and fats between the
two plants, or, if new proteins are introduced, whether they're included in the
database of known allergens. If nothing goes obviously wrong, the crop is free
to go to market.
It all sounds fine, until you dig a bit deeper,
critics of this process say. For one thing, they question the objectivity of
the allergen database because it's compiled at the University of
Nebraska–Lincoln, whose facilities are funded by the six major biotech
companies: Monsanto, Syngenta, Dow, Dupont Pioneer, Bayer, and BASF. Indeed, no
GMO proteins are on the list, but that's for lack of "sufficient
evidence" to put them there, says Richard Goodman, PhD, a UNL research
professor and former Monsanto employee. He does add, however, that much of the
existing data regarding the allergenic potential of GMO foods simply examines
them for amino acid sequences similar to those in known allergens—like peanuts
or milk—which limits the usefulness of the whole enterprise to people like
Mansmann: They think GMOs may be carrying heretofore undiscovered allergens. (If you're thinking, Well, what
do the clinical trials with humans show? The answer is: They're nonexistent
because, the biotech firms say, they are impractical, and, again, GMO foods are
basically presumed safe, don't undergo scrutiny as new drugs.)
The most fundamental complaint from those
worried about the health risks of GMO foods is that hardly any of the research
is independent; the biotech firms either conduct or pay for the studies forwarded
to the government, and they also pick and choose which ones to submit.
"The scandal is that the USDA does not force the companies to give results
of trials that had negative outcomes," says Harwood Schaffer, PhD, a
research assistant professor at the University of Tennessee's Agricul-tural
Policy Analysis Center. "We've seen this in medicine: You only get the
data that the [industry] wants you to see." Schaffer also points out that
the biotech firms consider their research proprietary, so there's no record for
the public to inspect: "Maybe GMO companies aren't hiding anything, but
the question is: Does the public have right
to know?"
One of my last stops in Cincinnati was the
office of affable Australian-born immunologist Simon Hogan, PhD, who,
interestingly, was the lead author of one of the few independently funded
GMO-food studies. In the early 2000s, Hogan's interest was piqued when he
learned GMO peas were being developed in his native country, so he decided to
investigate the new product. "I felt there was a fundamental lack of
knowledge on whether GMOs could have an effect" on animals (and possibly
people).
He was surprised by the results: Mice given the
GMO peas had inflammatory reactions such as "mucus hypersecretion,"
"pulmonary eosinophilia" (eosinophils in the lungs), and airway
hyperresponsiveness ("the lungs were twitchy," says Hogan). Most
important, the peas may have "perturbed" a tolerance mechanism in the
mice, leading to enhanced immunreactivity. When the study was published in 2005
in the Journal of Agricultural and Food
Chemistry, there was a deluge of media coverage both lauding and decrying
it—most notably on the corn side, a Nature Biotechnology article called Hogan's
study "mush" and charged, that mice probably aren't analogous to
humans when it comes to allergies.
With all the uproar, the pea project was
abruptly canceled. But eight years later, another team published a
contradictory report showing that mice react to proteins in GMO peas and in
conventional ones. It was funded by the European Union. (Hogan's very measured
response? Good science requires multiple studies before conclusions can be
drawn.)
While most people seem to tolerate GMO corn, I
asked Hogan if he thought it could be making a small cohort of the population
sick, as his peas did the mice. "I don't think definitive analysis has
been done to answer that question, and because you don't know definitely what
these [GMO] proteins could do…that's sufficient for me to say 'halt' until we
know more."
With the level of penetration of GMO foods, and
the fairly widespread acceptance of them in America (certainly compared with
Europe, where they're banned in many countries), saying "halt" seems
unlikely at this point. Definitely in the air, however, is better labeling of
such products. The Connecticut legislature passed a measure this June to
require it, and a whopping 96 percent of people favor GMO labeling, according
to a 2011 MSNBC poll. Whole Foods Market announced this March that by 2018
everything it sells in the U.S. and Canada will be labeled for GMOs. How the
store will implement that is hard to fathom given the ubiquity of industrial
corn: Will the bastion of healthy eating plaster GMO stickers on practically
every item on its shelves? "We're very aware of how much of a challenge
[labeling] is going to be," a company spokesman admitted, adding that
they're committed to it nonetheless.
My small family has been able to jettison GMOs,
thanks to the local farmers we've found and our willingness to do without the
vast majority of prepared foods. But my husband and I both have jobs, and there
are days when we can't imagine preparing everything from scratch forever. Yet when I was sick for all that time, my life felt totally out
of control. I still rue the day when I was desperate enough for a diagnosis to
believe I had chronic Lyme disease, which necessitated weaning my small son
from my breast before either of us was ready so I could be bombarded with
antibiotics.
When I think back to how suffocatingly powerless I felt, how
sidelined as a wife, mother, and productive person, I just feel, well, sick.
Although Dr. Mansmann told me that most people allergic to GMO corn can end up
tolerating small amounts after a couple years of abstinence, each time I've dared
cheat, I've awoken the next morning with a frozen left hand, a sore hip, and a
facial rash. So for now, at least, the extra work isn't really a choice; it's a
way of life, one that reminds me daily that our modern world is full of
challenges—dietary, economic, environmental—that at times feel overwhelming.
And perhaps that's the gift in this: I've had to slow down and think about my
food—how it was grown, what's in it, and which trade-offs were made in the
journey from a seed to my plate. That consciousness has to be worth something
bigger than just my health.
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