
Arch Intern Med. 1989 Oct;149(10):2318-24.
Safety of long-term large doses of aspartame.
Leon AS, Hunninghake DB, Bell C, Rassin DK, Tephly TR.
Division of Epidemiology, School of Public Health, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis.
Safety of long-term administration of 75 mg/kg of aspartame per day was evaluated with
the use of a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-group design in 108
male and female volunteers aged 18 to 62 years. Subjects received either aspartame or
placebo in capsule form three times daily for 24 weeks. No persistent changes over time
were noted in either group in vital signs; body weight; results of standard laboratory
tests; fasting blood levels of aspartame's constituent amino acids (aspartic acid and
phenylalanine), other amino acids, and methanol; or blood formate levels and 24-hour
urinary excretion of formate. There also were no statistically significant differences
between groups in the number of subjects experiencing symptoms or in the number of
symptoms per subject. These results further document the safety of the long-term
consumption of aspartame at doses equivalent to the amount of aspartame in approximately
10 L of beverage per day.