U.S. reaffirms safety of Monsanto milk drug

By Robert Steyer,The Post-Dispatch
Copyright 1998 St. Louis Post-Dispatch
January 23, 1999




Reaffirming that a Monsanto Co. drug is safe, the nation's top health officer has rejected appeals from crtitics to pull the genetically engineered product from the market.

Donna E. Shalala, secretary of health and human services, said the critics of BST - the drug that increases cows' milk production - have raised "no new scientific concerns" about the drug's safety.

That means the Food and Drug Administration, which reports to her, "does not intend to remove the product from the market," Shalala said in a letter sent Thursday to Vermont Sens. Patrick J. Leahy and James M. Jeffords.

They had asked her to re-examine the FDA's review of BST based on complains from two Vermont groups that oppose the drug. In addition, anti-biotechnology and consumer groups petitioned the FDA in mid-December to remove BST from the market, alleging that the original testing was flawed.

The FDA approved the drug in 1993, saying that BST was safe for humans who drink milk from BST-treated cows and for animals. Monsanto began selling BST in the United States in February 1994.

After a slow start, the drug, sold under the brand name Posilac, has recorded higher sales each year. Last year, it produced an estimated $ 200 million in revenue.

The FDA's approval was made "following extensive review of the data to support the safety and effectiveness (of BST)," Shalala said

The FDA has since completed a "page-by-page audit" of tests, again concluding that the drug is safe, Shalala said. Critics "did not review relevant data correctly," she added.

The FDA's original ruling has been endorsed by many organizations, such as the American Medical Association and American Cancer Society. It also has been supported by government agencies such as the National Institutes of Health and a committee that represents the World Health Organization and Food and Agricultural Organization.

Government support is not unanimous. Canada's top health agency, HealthCanada, rejected BST last week, saying that the risk of certain animal diseases, such as udder infections, was too great. But it said milk from BST-treated cows is safe for humans.

Monsanto disputed HealthCanada's analysis of BST's impact on animals, and is appealing the ruling.

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