A Review of the Environmental Fate and Effects of Acesulfame-Potassium

被引:31
|
作者
Belton, Kerry [1 ]
Schaefer, Edward [2 ]
Guiney, Patrick D. [3 ]
机构
[1] Grocery Manufacturers Assoc, Arlington, VA USA
[2] Eurofins EAG Agrosci, Easton, MD USA
[3] ECOTOX Guiney Consulting LLC, Stoughton, WI 53589 USA
关键词
Acesulfame potassium (CAS No; 55589-62-3); Artificial sweeteners; Ecological risk assessment; Probabilistic exposure modeling; WASTE-WATER TREATMENT; ARTIFICIAL SWEETENER ACESULFAME; PRESSURIZED LIQUID EXTRACTION; MASS-SPECTROMETRY; TREATMENT PLANTS; SURFACE WATERS; TRANSFORMATION PRODUCTS; AQUATIC ENVIRONMENT; OXIDATIVE STRESS; BIODEGRADATION;
D O I
10.1002/ieam.4248
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
The use of low and no calorie sweeteners (LNCSs) has increased substantially the past several decades. Their high solubility in water, low absorption to soils, and reliable analytical methods facilitate their detection in wastewater and surface waters. Low and no calorie sweeteners are widely used in food and beverage products around the world, have been approved as food additives, and are considered safe for human consumption by the United States Food and Drug Administration (USFDA) and other regulatory authorities. Concerns have been raised, however, regarding their growing presence and potential aquatic toxicity. Recent studies have provided new empirical environmental monitoring, environmental fate, and ecotoxicity on acesulfame potassium (ACE-K). Acesulfame potassium is an important high-production LNCS, widely detected in the environment and generally reported to be environmentally persistent. Acesulfame-potassium was selected for this environmental fate and effects review to determine its comparative risk to aquatic organisms. The biodegradation of ACE-K is predicted to be low, based on available quantitative structure-activity relationship (QSAR) models, and this has been confirmed by several investigations, mostly published prior to 2014. More recently, there appears to be an interesting paradigm shift with several reports of the enhanced ability of wastewater treatment plants to biodegrade ACE-K. Some studies report that ACE-K can be photodegraded into potentially toxic breakdown products, whereas other data indicate that this may not be the case. A robust set of acute and chronic ecotoxicity studies in fish, invertebrates, and freshwater plants provided critical data on ACE-K's aquatic toxicity. Acesulfame-potassium concentrations in wastewater and surface water are generally in the lower parts per billion (ppb) range, whereas concentrations in sludge and groundwater are much lower (parts per trillion [ppt]). This preliminary environmental risk assessment establishes that ACE-K has high margins of safety (MOSs) and presents a negligible risk to the aquatic environment based on a collation of extensive ACE-K environmental monitoring, conservative predicted environmental concentration (PEC) and predicted no-effect concentration (PNEC) estimates, and prudent probabilistic exposure modeling.Integr Environ Assess Manag2020;16:421-437. (c) 2020 The Authors.Integrated Environmental Assessment and Managementpublished by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of Society of Environmental Toxicology & Chemistry (SETAC)
引用
收藏
页码:421 / 437
页数:17
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Acesulfame-potassium
    Ohkura, Y
    JOURNAL OF THE JAPANESE SOCIETY FOR FOOD SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY-NIPPON SHOKUHIN KAGAKU KOGAKU KAISHI, 2005, 52 (10): : 505 - 505
  • [2] Pharmacokinetics of Sucralose and Acesulfame-Potassium in Breast Milk Following Ingestion of Diet Soda
    Rother, Kristina I.
    Sylvetsky, Allison C.
    Walter, Peter J.
    Garraffo, H. Martin
    Fields, David A.
    JOURNAL OF PEDIATRIC GASTROENTEROLOGY AND NUTRITION, 2018, 66 (03): : 466 - 470
  • [3] Environmental fate and behavior of acesulfame in laboratory experiments
    Storck, Florian R.
    Skark, Christian
    Remmler, Frank
    Brauch, Heinz-Juergen
    WATER SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, 2016, 74 (12) : 2832 - 2842
  • [4] Consumption of Diet Soda Sweetened with Sucralose and Acesulfame-Potassium Alters Inflammatory Transcriptome Pathways in Females with Overweight and Obesity
    Sylvetsky, Allison C.
    Sen, Sabyasachi
    Merkel, Patrick
    Dore, Fiona
    Stern, David B.
    Henry, Curtis J.
    Kai, Hongyi
    Walter, Peter J.
    Crandall, Keith A.
    Rother, Kristina I.
    Hubal, Monica J.
    MOLECULAR NUTRITION & FOOD RESEARCH, 2020, 64 (11)
  • [5] A review of the environmental fate, effects, and exposures of bisphenol A
    Staples, CA
    Dorn, PB
    Klecka, GM
    O'Block, ST
    Harris, LR
    CHEMOSPHERE, 1998, 36 (10) : 2149 - 2173
  • [6] Environmental fate and effects of the lampricide Bayluscide: a review
    Dawson, VK
    JOURNAL OF GREAT LAKES RESEARCH, 2003, 29 : 475 - 492
  • [7] Environmental fate and effects of the lampricide TFM: a review
    Hubert, TD
    JOURNAL OF GREAT LAKES RESEARCH, 2003, 29 : 456 - 474
  • [8] Acesulfame potassium: Soffritti responds
    Soffritti, Morando
    ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH PERSPECTIVES, 2006, 114 (09) : A516 - A517
  • [9] Ecotoxicology of glutaraldehyde: Review of environmental fate and effects studies
    Leung, HW
    ECOTOXICOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL SAFETY, 2001, 49 (01) : 26 - 39
  • [10] Environmental fate and aquatic effects of propylbenzenes and trimethylbenzenes: A review
    Peng, Lihong
    Lin, Yufei
    Meng, Fanping
    Wu, Jiangyue
    Zheng, Yang
    Sun, Tianli
    Wang, Guoshan
    CHEMOSPHERE, 2021, 264