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Recombinant Bovine Somatotropin vs Red Dye 3: which is worse?

Quick answer: Recombinant Bovine Somatotropin carries the heavier risk profile. Recombinant Bovine Somatotropin is in the EU and in the US; Red Dye 3 is in the EU and in the US.

PropertyRecombinant Bovine SomatotropinRed Dye 3
EU status
US status
Risk level
Banned inEuropean Union, Canada, Japan, Australia, New ZealandEuropean Union (restricted to cocktail cherries only at max 200 mg/kg), Norway, Iceland
Restricted inUnited Kingdom (cocktail cherry application only)
Categoryadditiveadditive
Where it hides

What is Recombinant Bovine Somatotropin?

Recombinant bovine somatotropin (rBST) is the synthetic version of bovine growth hormone (BST), naturally produced by the pituitary gland in cattle. The recombinant version is produced using genetically engineered bacteria and is injected into dairy cows to increase milk production by 10-15%. Brand name: Posilac.

What is Red Dye 3?

Red Dye 3 (erythrosine) is a synthetic cherry-pink fluorescent dye belonging to the xanthene class. It contains approximately 58% iodine by weight, distinguishing it from azo dyes. Its chemical formula is C20H6I4Na2O5. Approved since 1907, it is one of the oldest certified US food colorants and was notably the first synthetic food dye formally revoked by the FDA in decades.

Documented risks

Recombinant Bovine Somatotropin: See recombinant-bovine-growth-hormone-rbgh for full detail. Key concerns: rBST elevates IGF-1 in milk; elevated blood IGF-1 is associated with breast, prostate, and colorectal cancer risk in epidemiological studies. Animal welfare: increased mastitis (up to 25-50% higher rates), lameness, and antibiotic use. The Codex Alimentarius Commission declined to endorse rBST safety MRLs in a historic 33-29 vote. Health Canada rejected rBST approval in 1999 after finding it caused significant animal health problems requiring increased antibiotic use.

Red Dye 3: The FDA revoked Red Dye 3 authorization in January 2025, marking the first synthetic food dye ban by the FDA since Red Dye 2 in 1976. The revocation was triggered by the Delaney Clause, which mandates revocation of any food additive found to cause cancer in animals regardless of dose. The carcinogenicity data stems from studies showing that high doses of erythrosine caused thyroid follicular cell tumors in male rats. The mechanism is indirect: erythrosine suppresses thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) feedback by elevating thyroxine (T4) levels, causing chronic TSH suppression that promotes thyroid cell proliferation and ultimately tumor formation. This is a rat-specific mechanism related to their thyroxine-binding protein system, which differs from human biology. EFSA's 2011 comprehensive safety assessment concluded erythrosine was unlikely to be genotoxic at typical food use levels and set an ADI of 0.1 mg/kg body weight — one of the lowest for any food color. EFSA restricted EU use to cocktail cherries only (max 200 mg/kg). The high iodine content (58% by weight) raises concerns for thyroid-sensitive individuals. Excessive erythrosine intake could theoretically contribute to iodine overload and thyroid disruption, particularly in individuals with hyperthyroidism or Hashimoto's disease. The FDA had been aware of the rat thyroid tumor data since 1990 but delayed action for 35 years. Advocacy groups including CSPI petitioned for a ban since 1983. The January 2025 revocation finally addressed this long-standing regulatory gap.

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