Abstract

Chemical contaminants are present in all foods. Data on the occurrence of contaminants in foods that are often consumed or contain high contaminant concentrations are critical for the estimation of exposure and evaluation of potential negative health effects. Due to limited resources for the monitoring of contaminants and other chemical substances in foods, methods for prioritisation are needed. We have developed a straightforward semi-quantitative method to rank chemical substances in foods for monitoring as part of a risk-based food control. The method is based on considerations of toxicity, level of exposure including both occurrence in food and dietary intake, vulnerability of one or more population groups due to high exposure because of special food habits or resulting from specific genetic variants, diseases, drug use or age/life stages, and the adequacy of both toxicity and exposure data. The chemical substances ranked for monitoring were contaminants occurring naturally, unintentionally or incidentally in foods or formed during food processing, and the inclusion criteria were high toxicity, high exposure and/or lack of toxicity or exposure data. In principle, this method can be used for all classes of chemical substances that occur in foods, both unintended contaminants and deliberately added chemical substances. Foods considered relevant for monitoring of the different chemical substances were also identified. The outcomes of ranking exercises using the new method including considerations of vulnerable groups and adequacy of data and a shortened version based on risk considerations only were compared. The results showed that the resolution between the contaminants was notably increased with the extended method, which we considered as advantageous for the ranking of chemical substances for monitoring in foods.

Highlights

  • Food safety is an important prerequisite for good health

  • There are no established monitoring programmes, a ranking serving as basis for prioritisation by the risk managers on which substances to monitor for the limited funds available for this purpose each year is needed

  • 33 relevant chemical substances or chemical groups were selected by expert judgement as a proof of concept for the development of a ranking method

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Summary

Introduction

With the constant change in food production, processing and dietary habits, there is a continuous need for up-to-date knowledge on the presence of chemical substances in foods. Such knowledge is a critical part of risk assessments of chemical substances in food to ensure food safety. Data on the occurrence of chemical substances in highly consumed food items and in less consumed but highly contaminated food items are critical for risk assessments related to dietary exposure. Prioritisation of chemical substances for monitoring in foods has to take into consideration i.a. potential health hazards, occurrences and the adequacy of data

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