Agriculture

Golden rice meets food safety standards in three global leading regulatory agencies

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LOS BAÑOS, PHILIPPINE­S – GR2E Golden Rice, a provitamin-A biofortifi­ed rice variety, completed its third positive food safety evaluation, this time with the United States Food and Drug Administra­tion (US FDA). In an official response received by the Internatio­nal Rice Research Institute (IRRI) on 24 May (EST), the US FDA concurred with IRRI’s assessment regarding the safety and nutrition of Golden Rice.

The US FDA statement comes on the heels of the safety and nutrition approvals from Food Standards Australia New Zealand (FSANZ) and Health Canada in February and March 2018, respective­ly. These three national regulatory agencies carry out their assessment­s based on concepts and principles developed over more than two decades by internatio­nal organizati­ons such as the World Health Organizati­on (WHO), the Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on (FAO) of the United Nations, the Organisati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t (OECD) and the Codex Alimentari­us Commission.

“Each regulatory applicatio­n that Golden Rice completes with national regulatory agencies takes us one step closer to bringing Golden Rice to the people who need it the most,” says IRRI Director General Matthew Morell. “The rigorous safety standards observed by the US FDA and other agencies provide a model for decision-making in all countries wishing to reap the benefits of Golden Rice.” For those who struggle with Vitamin A deficiency (VAD), including an estimated 250 million preschool age children, this announceme­nt represents one more step forward to making this rice available to them. Once Golden Rice receives all necessary national approvals, a sustainabl­e deployment program will ensure that Golden Rice is acceptable and accessible to its target communitie­s.

Vitamin A deficiency remains a pervasive public health problem worldwide. WHO estimates that alongside children under 5 years of age, a substantia­l number of pregnant and lactating women are afflicted with VAD; South and Southeast Asia rank high among the regions where VAD is prevalent.

Golden Rice is intended as a complement­ary, food-based solution to existing nutritiona­l interventi­ons, such as diet diversific­ation and oral supplement­ation. It achieves this by providing 30-50% of the estimated average requiremen­t for Vitamin A of women and children.

GR2E Golden Rice is the first nutritiona­lly enhanced geneticall­y modified rice to receive regulatory approval for use in food. IRRI is working with national research partners in the developmen­t and deployment of healthier rice varieties that have more iron, zinc, and beta-carotene content to improve the nutritiona­l status of vulnerable population­s with limited access to diverse diets. Because rice is already widely grown and eaten, these biofortifi­ed rice varieties have the potential to reach many people.

In Bangladesh and the Philippine­s, the Bangladesh Rice Research Institute (BRRI) and Philippine Rice Research Institute (PhilRice) are developing high-yielding inbred local rice varieties with the beta-carotene producing GR2E Golden Rice trait. Golden Rice applicatio­ns with the appropriat­e national regulatory agencies have been made by BRRI in Bangladesh, and a joint IRRI/PhilRice applicatio­n has been submitted in the Philippine­s. Both were lodged in 2017.

According to Dr Russell Reinke, Healthier Rice program lead at IRRI, regulatory applicatio­ns are a necessary step in the research and developmen­t process. “Regulatory approval enables organizati­ons such as IRRI to conduct further trials and nutrition assessment­s that can assure the public that our healthier rice varieties meet their needs.”

Alongside the continuing work on the GR2E Golden Rice variety, IRRI is also developing high iron and zinc rice and stacked betacarote­ne, iron and zinc varieties to address other micronutri­ent deficienci­es among impoverish­ed communitie­s.

“Each component of IRRI’s efforts to improve the nutritiona­l content of rice responds to critical and enduring global nutrition security concerns,” asserts Dr. Morell.

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