Arsenic in brown rice: do the benefits outweigh the risks Original paper

Researched by:

  • Dr. Umar Aitsaam ID
    Dr. Umar Aitsaam

    User avatarClinical Pharmacist and Master’s student in Clinical Pharmacy with research interests in pharmacovigilance, behavioral interventions in mental health, and AI applications in clinical decision support. Experience includes digital health research with Bloomsbury Health (London) and pharmacovigilance practice in patient support programs. Published work covers drug awareness among healthcare providers, postpartum depression management, and patient safety reporting.

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January 22, 2026

Researched by:

  • Dr. Umar Aitsaam ID
    Dr. Umar Aitsaam

    User avatarClinical Pharmacist and Master’s student in Clinical Pharmacy with research interests in pharmacovigilance, behavioral interventions in mental health, and AI applications in clinical decision support. Experience includes digital health research with Bloomsbury Health (London) and pharmacovigilance practice in patient support programs. Published work covers drug awareness among healthcare providers, postpartum depression management, and patient safety reporting.

    Read More

Last Updated: 2026-01-22

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Dr. Umar Aitsaam

Clinical Pharmacist and Master’s student in Clinical Pharmacy with research interests in pharmacovigilance, behavioral interventions in mental health, and AI applications in clinical decision support. Experience includes digital health research with Bloomsbury Health (London) and pharmacovigilance practice in patient support programs. Published work covers drug awareness among healthcare providers, postpartum depression management, and patient safety reporting.

What was reviewed?

This mini-review examined arsenic-in-brown-rice as a practical risk–benefit question for consumers and public health, asking whether common messaging that promotes brown rice over white rice is scientifically justified. The authors synthesized evidence showing that inorganic arsenic concentrates in rice’s outer layers (bran and germ), which are retained in brown rice but removed during milling to make white rice, leading to systematically higher inorganic arsenic in brown rice. They also summarized how arsenic enters the food system (soil, irrigation water, historical pesticide residues), why rice is a globally relevant exposure pathway, and why translating toxicology into nutrition guidance requires explicit “dose matters” framing rather than simplistic “whole grain is always better” claims.

Who was reviewed?

Because this is a review, the “who” is drawn from the populations represented in the cited evidence base rather than a single enrolled cohort. The paper highlights: general rice consumers (including those increasing rice intake due to gluten-free/plant-based patterns), U.S. subpopulations whose rice-derived inorganic arsenic exposure may approach drinking-water exposure, and vulnerable life stages including pregnant people, fetuses, infants, and children who may face higher risk from arsenic-containing rice and rice-based foods. The review also references evidence from more homogeneous adult cohorts (e.g., health professionals of primarily European descent) used in benefit claims for brown rice, emphasizing that limited diversity weakens confidence in broad public guidance.

Most important findings

Across the evidence summarized, the central HMTC-relevant conclusion is that inorganic arsenic is consistently higher in brown rice than white rice, and risk increases with consumption amount and product type; therefore, certification and messaging should focus on measured inorganic arsenic, exposure frequency, and high-risk groups rather than assuming “brown is better.”

Critical pointDetails
Brown rice concentrates inorganic arsenicInorganic arsenic is enriched in bran/germ; removing these layers reduces inorganic arsenic in white rice, making brown rice higher by design of the grain anatomy and milling process.
Measured level differences are substantialThe review cites consumer and FDA analyses indicating brown rice averages meaningfully higher inorganic arsenic than comparable white rice; FDA figures summarized include ~92 ppb (white) vs ~154 ppb (brown), and infant rice cereals also contain notable inorganic arsenic.
Regulatory asymmetry matters for certificationU.S. drinking water has a 10 ppb total arsenic limit, but there is no equivalent universal limit for foods; rice can therefore exceed drinking-water benchmarks, making third-party certification thresholds and transparent reporting especially important.
Risk is dose- and population-dependentRisk rises with intake and is especially concerning for infants/children and pregnancy-related exposures; the review links arsenic exposure to cancer outcomes emphasized in risk assessments and to broader cardiometabolic endpoints (hypertension, diabetes, obesity) discussed mechanistically and epidemiologically.
“Benefit” evidence is weaker than marketing impliesClaimed cardiometabolic benefits often come from animal or extract-based studies rather than whole-grain human intake, and one highlighted diabetes risk-reduction comparison relied on a relatively homogeneous population, limiting generalizability for public guidance.

Key implications

For arsenic-in-brown-rice, primary regulatory impacts include treating inorganic arsenic in rice as a managed dietary exposure where “dose determines toxicity,” not a binary safe/unsafe label; HMTC-style certification requirements should specify inorganic arsenic testing, rice type labeling, and tighter criteria for infant/child products. Industry applications include sourcing strategies (origin and cultivation context), product design that avoids defaulting to brown rice in high-consumption items, and consumer-facing guidance that moderates serving frequency. Research gaps include human risk–benefit assessments that directly compare brown versus white rice patterns across diverse populations. Practical recommendations include routine batch testing, product-category thresholds, and clear disclosures for high-frequency consumers.

Citation

Su LJ, Chiang T-C, O’Connor SN. Arsenic in brown rice: do the benefits outweigh the risks?Frontiers in Nutrition. 2023;10:1209574. doi:10.3389/fnut.2023.1209574

Arsenic (As)

Arsenic is a naturally occurring metalloid that ranks first on the ATSDR toxic substances list. Inorganic arsenic contaminates water, rice and consumer products, and exposure is linked to cardiovascular disease, cognitive deficits, low birth weight and cancer. HMTC’s stringent certification applies ALARA principles to protect vulnerable populations.