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Sodium Nitrate vs Advantame: which is worse?

Quick answer: Sodium Nitrate carries the heavier risk profile. Sodium Nitrate is in the EU and in the US; Advantame is in the EU and in the US.

PropertySodium NitrateAdvantame
EU status
US status
Risk level
Banned in
Restricted inEuropean Union (maximum permitted levels), United Kingdom, AustraliaEuropean Union (ADI 5 mg/kg body weight)
Categoryadditiveadditive
Where it hides

What is Sodium Nitrate?

Sodium nitrate (NaNO3) is a naturally occurring salt found in soil and some plants, and also synthetically produced for use as a food preservative and curing agent. It is converted to sodium nitrite by bacterial action in foods or in the body, where it exerts its preservative and curing effects. Sometimes called 'Chile saltpeter' after its natural South American ore source.

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.

Documented risks

Sodium Nitrate: Sodium nitrate shares the same health concerns as sodium nitrite: conversion to nitrosamines is the primary mechanism of concern. Sodium nitrate is converted to nitrite by bacterial reduction in foods and by nitrate-reducing bacteria in saliva before reaching the stomach. The subsequent conversion of nitrite to nitrosamines carries the same carcinogenicity concerns described for sodium nitrite. IARC's 2015 classification of processed meat as Group 1 human carcinogen applies to all nitrite/nitrate-cured processed meats. EFSA's 2017 re-evaluation established acceptable daily intakes (ADIs) for nitrate (3.7 mg/kg body weight/day) and nitrite (0.07 mg/kg body weight/day) based on risk assessment. A notable paradox in nitrate nutrition: dietary nitrate from vegetables (particularly leafy greens like spinach, arugula, and lettuce, and root vegetables like beets) is associated with cardioprotective effects through the nitrate-nitrite-NO pathway, where nitric oxide from dietary nitrate improves vascular function and reduces blood pressure. This beneficial effect of vegetable nitrate contrasts with the potential harm from processed meat nitrate/nitrite, suggesting that the food matrix and associated compounds (antioxidants in vegetables vs. amines in meat protein) significantly influence whether nitrite produces beneficial or harmful effects. Infant exposure to high nitrate levels — particularly from well water — can cause methemoglobinemia ('blue baby syndrome'). The EU and WHO set strict nitrate limits for infant water and food for this reason.

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.

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