“…The earliest epidemiological studies have failed in finding an association between acrylamide dietary intake and an increased risk of cancer whereas some of the latest epidemiological studies have reported an increased risk for some kinds of cancer. Up to date, the outcomes of these epidemiological studies agree in indicating no positive association between total dietary acrylamide intake and risk of colorectal cancer (Hogervorst, Schouten, Konings, Goldbohm, & van den Brandt, 2008a;Larsson, Kesson, Bergkvist, & Wolk, 2009;Mucci, Adami, & Wolk, 2006;Mucci, Dickman, Steineck, Adami, & Augustsson, 2003;Pelucchi et al, 2006), bladder cancer (Hogervorst, Schouten, Konings, Goldbohm, & van den Brandt, 2008b;Mucci et al, 2003), esophageal cancer (Hogervorst et al, 2008a;Pelucchi et al, 2006), prostate cancer (Hogervorst et al, 2008a;Larsson, Akesson, & Wolk, 2009b;Pelucchi et al, 2006;Wilson et al, 2008), oropharyngeal (Pelucchi et al, 2006), laryngeal (Pelucchi et al, 2006), pancreatic (Hogervorst et al, 2008a), gastric (Hogervorst et al, 2008a) and brain cancer (Hogervorst, Schouten, Konings, Goldbohm, & van den Brandt, 2009a). For renal cell cancer, ovarian cancer, and breast cancer, the results from epidemiological studies are conflicting.…”