Advantame vs Lead acetate: which is worse?
Quick answer: Lead acetate carries the heavier risk profile. Advantame is — in the EU and — in the US; Lead acetate is banned in the EU and allowed in the US.
| Property | Advantame | Lead acetate |
|---|---|---|
| EU status | — | Banned |
| US status | — | Allowed |
| Risk level | — | high |
| Banned in | — | European Union |
| Restricted in | European Union (ADI 5 mg/kg body weight) | — |
| Category | additive | heavy metal |
| Where it hides | — | progressive hair dye, men's hair color |
What is Advantame?
Advantame is the newest FDA-approved synthetic sweetener, approved in 2014. Like neotame, it is a structural derivative of aspartame but with a vanillin-derived substituent. It is approximately 20,000 times sweeter than sucrose — the most potent sweetener currently approved for food use in the US.
What is Lead acetate?
Lead acetate is a lead compound used in progressive darkening hair dyes.
Documented risks
Advantame: Advantame is the newest approved high-intensity sweetener with the least post-approval safety data. The FDA approval was based on extensive pre-market animal studies showing no significant toxicity, carcinogenicity, reproductive toxicity, or neurotoxicity at relevant doses. EFSA approved it for EU use in 2014, finding no safety concerns based on the submitted data. Like other synthetic sweeteners, advantame has not been studied for long-term effects in large human populations post-approval. The same gut microbiome and glucose tolerance concerns raised for other sweeteners (aspartame, sucralose, acesulfame K) have not been specifically studied for advantame, though the class-wide concerns are relevant. Given its 2014 approval date, independent long-term safety studies are still limited.
Lead acetate: Lead is a potent neurotoxin with no safe level. Banned in EU cosmetics; the US FDA revoked its authorization in 2018.
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