Risk assessment for furan contamination through the food chain in Belgian children

被引:9
|
作者
Scholl, Georges [1 ,2 ]
Huybrechts, Inge [3 ,4 ]
Humblet, Marie-France [1 ]
Scippo, Marie-Louise [5 ]
De Pauw, Edwin [2 ]
Eppe, Gauthier
Saegerman, Claude [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Liege, Res Unit Epidemiol & Risk Anal Appl Vet Sci UREAR, Fac Vet Med, B-4000 Liege, Belgium
[2] Univ Liege, CART, Mass Spectrometry Lab, Dept Chem, B-4000 Liege, Belgium
[3] Univ Ghent, Dept Publ Hlth, B-9000 Ghent, Belgium
[4] Int Agcy Res Canc, Dietary Exposure Assessment Grp, F-69372 Lyon, France
[5] Univ Liege, CART, Lab Food Anal, Fac Vet Med, B-4000 Liege, Belgium
关键词
chromatography; GC/MS; risk assessment; process contaminants; processed foods; coffee; IDENTIFICATION; METABOLITE; OXIDATION; TOXICITY; COOKING; COFFEE;
D O I
10.1080/19440049.2012.686456
中图分类号
O69 [应用化学];
学科分类号
081704 ;
摘要
Young, old, pregnant and immuno-compromised persons are of great concern for risk assessors as they represent the sub-populations most at risk. The present paper focuses on risk assessment linked to furan exposure in children. Only the Belgian population was considered because individual contamination and consumption data that are required for accurate risk assessment were available for Belgian children only. Two risk assessment approaches, the so-called deterministic and probabilistic, were applied and the results were compared for the estimation of daily intake. A significant difference between the average Estimated Daily Intake (EDI) was underlined between the deterministic (419 ng kg(-1) body weight (bw) day(-1)) and the probabilistic (583 ng kg(-1) bw day(-1)) approaches, which results from the mathematical treatment of the null consumption and contamination data. The risk was characterised by two ways: (1) the classical approach by comparison of the EDI to a reference dose (RfD(chronic-oral)) and (2) the most recent approach, namely the Margin of Exposure (MoE) approach. Both reached similar conclusions: the risk level is not of a major concern, but is neither negligible. In the first approach, only 2.7 or 6.6% (respectively in the deterministic and in the probabilistic way) of the studied population presented an EDI above the RfD(chronic-oral). In the second approach, the percentage of children displaying a MoE above 10,000 and below 100 is 3-0% and 20-0.01% in the deterministic and probabilistic modes, respectively. In addition, children were compared to adults and significant differences between the contamination patterns were highlighted. While major contamination was linked to coffee consumption in adults (55%), no item predominantly contributed to the contamination in children. The most important were soups (19%), dairy products (17%), pasta and rice (11%), fruit and potatoes (9% each).
引用
收藏
页码:1219 / 1229
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Soy in wheat - Contamination levels and food allergy risk assessment
    Remington, Benjamin C.
    Taylor, Steve L.
    Marx, David B.
    Petersen, Barbara J.
    Baumert, Joseph L.
    [J]. FOOD AND CHEMICAL TOXICOLOGY, 2013, 62 : 485 - 491
  • [22] Arsenic contamination in food-chain: Transfer of arsenic into food materials through groundwater irrigation
    Huq, S. M. Imamul
    Joardar, J. C.
    Parvin, S.
    Correll, Ray
    Naidu, Ravi
    [J]. JOURNAL OF HEALTH POPULATION AND NUTRITION, 2006, 24 (03) : 305 - 316
  • [23] Risk assessment of antimicrobial resistance along the food chain through culture-independent methodologies
    Likotrafiti, E.
    Oniciuc, E. A.
    Prieto, M.
    Santos, J. A.
    Lopez, S.
    Alvarez-Ordonez, A.
    [J]. EFSA JOURNAL, 2018, 16
  • [24] TERRESTRIAL FOOD-CHAIN MODEL FOR RISK ASSESSMENT
    TASCA, JJ
    SAUNDERS, MF
    PRANN, RS
    [J]. SUPERFUND 89: PROCEEDINGS OF THE 10TH NATIONAL CONFERENCE, 1989, : 111 - 116
  • [25] Livestock, food chain and public health risk assessment
    Smeu, Irina
    Taylor, Rachel A.
    [J]. EFSA JOURNAL, 2019, 17
  • [26] Surprising findings following a Belgian food contamination with polychlorobiphenyls and dioxins
    Schepens, PJC
    Covaci, A
    Jorens, PG
    Hens, L
    Scharpé, S
    van Larebeke, N
    [J]. ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH PERSPECTIVES, 2001, 109 (02) : 101 - 103
  • [27] CONTAMINATION CONTROL IN FOOD SUPPLY CHAIN
    Hu, Yingjie
    Hu, JianQiang
    Xu, Yifan
    Wang, Fengchun
    Cao, Rong Zeng
    [J]. PROCEEDINGS OF THE 2010 WINTER SIMULATION CONFERENCE, 2010, : 2678 - 2681
  • [28] ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION AND THE FOOD-CHAIN
    HOLLINGWORTH, J
    [J]. CANADIAN FAMILY PHYSICIAN, 1987, 33 : 833 - 833
  • [29] Deliberate contamination of the food supply chain
    Manning, L
    Baines, RN
    Chadd, SA
    [J]. BRITISH FOOD JOURNAL, 2005, 107 (4-5): : 225 - 245
  • [30] Cadmium contamination in food crops: Risk assessment and control in smart age
    Yan, Huili
    Zhang, Hezifan
    Hao, Shuangnan
    Wang, Luyao
    Xu, Wenxiu
    Mi, Ma
    Luo, Yongming
    He, Zhenyan
    [J]. CRITICAL REVIEWS IN ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, 2023, 53 (18) : 1643 - 1661