| Literature DB >> 23140444 |
Rainbow Vogt1, Deborah Bennett, Diana Cassady, Joshua Frost, Beate Ritz, Irva Hertz-Picciotto.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In the absence of current cumulative dietary exposure assessments, this analysis was conducted to estimate exposure to multiple dietary contaminants for children, who are more vulnerable to toxic exposure than adults.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23140444 PMCID: PMC3551655 DOI: 10.1186/1476-069X-11-83
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health ISSN: 1476-069X Impact factor: 5.984
Sources of data for food contaminants
| Arsenic, Dieldrin, Chlordane, DDT | Mean values reported from the Total Diet Study (USFDA, 2003) [ | IRIS Database (USEPA, 2010) [ | EPA (USEPA, 2010) [ |
| Lead, Chlorpyrifos, Permethrin, Endosulfan | Mean values reported from the Total Diet Study (USFDA, 2003) [ | IRIS Database (USEPA, 2010) [ | Not available |
| Mercury | Mean values from USHHS and USEPA data (USFDA, 2006) [ | IRIS Database (USEPA, 2010) [ | Not available |
| PCDD/Fs | Mean concentrations reported from the TDS weighted by toxic equivalent (USFDA, 2004a) [ | Provisional tolerable monthly intake established by the World Health Organization (JECFA, 2001) [ | EPA Dioxin Reassessment for 2,3,7,8-Tetrachlorodibenzo- |
| Acrylamide | USDA Total Diet Study of Acrylamide (CEPA, 2005) [ | IRIS Database (USEPA, 2010) [ | Not available |
Intake of food contaminants in preschool-aged children (mg/kg/day)
| 207 | 9.48E-04 | 3.17E-04 | 9.22E-04 | 2.51E-03 | 0.0002 | 97.10% | - | - | ||
| | | | | | | | | - | | |
| Arsenic | 207 | 2.37E-04 | 3.84E-05 | 1.02E-04 | 4.03E-04 | 0.0003 | 18.36% | 6.67E-07 | 100.0% | |
| Lead‡ | 207 | 6.92E-05 | 5.90E-05 | 1.18E-04 | 2.35E-04 | 0.000‡ | 100.00% | - | - | |
| Methylmercury | 147 | 3.17E-05 | 5.68E-05 | 1.40E-06 | 2.53E-05 | 1.02E-04 | 0.0001 | 10.20% | - | - |
| Chlorpyrifos | 207 | 7.45E-05 | 6.56E-05 | 1.60E-05 | 5.59E-05 | 1.51E-04 | 0.003 | 0.00% | - | - |
| Permethrin | 207 | 1.29E-04 | 1.60E-04 | 3.06E-06 | 7.35E-05 | 3.32E-04 | 0.05 | 0.00% | - | - |
| Endosulfan | 207 | 4.01E-05 | 3.31E-05 | 1.07E-05 | 3.16E-05 | 8.95E-05 | 0.006 | 0.00% | - | - |
| Chlordane | 207 | 8.45E-07 | 4.84E-07 | 1.46E-06 | 2.63E-06 | 0.0005 | 0.00% | 2.86E-06 | 6.76% | |
| Dieldrin | 207 | 3.03E-06 | 1.52E-06 | 3.36E-06 | 7.82E-06 | 0.00005 | 0.00% | 6.25E-08 | 100.00% | |
| DDE‡ | 207 | 1.78E-05 | 1.36E-05 | 3.12E-05 | 5.51E-05 | 0.000‡ | 100.00% | 2.94E-06 | 100.00% | |
| PCDD/Fs | 207 | 4.78E-10 | 4.74E-10 | 9.34E-10 | 1.58E-09 | 2.30E-09 | 2.42% | 1.00E-12 | 100.00% | |
† Boldface values represent whole-population average estimated exposures that exceed the non-cancer or cancer benchmarks.
†† Cancer benchmarks equal 10-6 divided by the cancer slope factor and represents the exposure concentration at which lifetime cancer risk is one in one million.
The source is the EPA IRIS except for PCDD/Fs, for which the cancer potency factor for TCDD was used from the EPA dioxin reassessment (2003) [34].
‡ The EPA has concluded that setting RfDs for lead is inappropriate because effects occur at levels so low as to be essentially without a threshold. The EPA has also not set a reference dosage for DDE thus both are presented as having a RfD of zero.
Figure 1Hazard ratios using Reference Dosages for contaminants.
Figure 2Hazard ratios of Cancer Benchmarks for contaminants.
Top five food sources for contaminants in preschool-aged children
| Highest | 2nd | 3rd | 4th | 5th | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| crackers | fried potatoesb | cereal | graham crackers | chips | |
| Mean μg/kg/day | 0.434607 | 0.257568 | 0.188175 | 0.574920 | 0.323679 |
| n | 125 | 118 | 100 | 94 | 71 |
| % range | 3.9-82.4% | 8.9-76.7% | 2.2-70.4% | 6.2-84.1% | 4.2-96.6% |
| Highest | 2nd | 3rd | 4th | 5th | |
| poultryb | cereal | salmon | tuna | mushrooms | |
| Mean μg/kg/day | 0.022756 | 0.014547 | 0.141837 | 0.183135 | 0.052914 |
| n | 148 | 81 | 77 | 70 | 61 |
| % range | 0.6-74.7% | 2.3-47.9% | 2.3-97.6% | 10.3-96.4% | 0.6-81.9% |
| dairyb | apple juice | grapes | cookies | sweet potatoesc | |
| Mean μg/kg/day | 0.032679 | 0.043302 | 0.017289 | 0.015441 | 0.039843 |
| n | 184 | 112 | 58 | 42 | 36 |
| % range | 7.1-83.8% | 4.8-78.3% | 3.2-35.5% | 5.2-40.0% | 7.5-63.1% |
| seafoodb | tuna | freshwater fishb | n/a | n/a | |
| Mean μg/kg/day | 0.030454 | 0.033099 | 0.015439 | n/a | n/a |
| n | 91 | 72 | 69 | n/a | n/a |
| % range | 1.6-100% | 5.7-100% | 0.7-100% | n/a | n/a |
| Highest | 2nd | 3rd | 4th | 5th | |
| grapes | apples | peaches | dairyb | tomatoes | |
| Mean μg/kg/day | 0.027609 | 0.017583 | 0.019758 | 0.002052 | 0.006011 |
| n | 179 | 174 | 127 | 49 | 28 |
| % range | 3.9-86.8% | 3.9-91% | 2.4-69.9% | 1.2-60.8% | 2.7-48.9% |
| lettuce | spinach | broccolib | tomatoes | peaches | |
| Mean μg/kg/day | 0.072562 | 0.138982 | 0.005281 | 0.014693 | 0.003968 |
| n | 108 | 103 | 102 | 86 | 59 |
| % range | 4.9-98.5% | 3.4-99.4% | 0.5-99% | 1.2-98.7% | 0.2-98.9% |
| apples | peaches | strawberries | tomatoes | pears | |
| Mean μg/kg/day | 0.008055 | 0.009462 | 0.006409 | 0.009509 | 0.006667 |
| n | 129 | 99 | 94 | 75 | 48 |
| % range | 1.2-79.4% | 7.6-77.5% | 4.8-62.1% | 8.8-85.8% | 7.2-63.3% |
| Highest | 2nd | 3rd | 4th | 5th | |
| dairyb | cucumber | meatb | popcorn | potatoes | |
| Mean μg/kg/day | 0.012221 | 0.003734 | 0.000745 | 0.000844 | 0.000985 |
| n | 200 | 96 | 94 | 65 | 55 |
| % range | 1.0-99.8% | 1.4-96.3% | 1.0-55.0% | 0.8-20.1% | 0.3-44.2% |
| dairyb | meatb | cucumber | cantaloupe | pizza | |
| Mean μg/kg/day | 0.001563 | 0.000606 | 0.002496 | 0.000547 | 0.000172 |
| n | 195 | 108 | 101 | 63 | 40 |
| % range | 5.7-96.0% | 1.4-76.4% | 5.2-93.6% | 3.4-61.7% | 1.1-56.6% |
| dairyb | potatoes | meatb | freshwater fishb | pizza | |
| Mean μg/kg/day | 0.020878 | 0.006516 | 0.003474 | 0.01115 | 0.00151 |
| n | 199 | 101 | 94 | 62 | 61 |
| % range | 6.1-97.5% | 1.1-81.6% | 1.9-43.4% | 1.8-86.8% | 1.3-48.3% |
| dairyb | meatb | potatoes | cereal | mushrooms | |
| Mean ng/kg/day | 0.000469 | 0.000202 | 0.000139 | 0.000058 | 0.000155 |
| n | 196 | 128 | 39 | 39 | 39 |
| % range | 7.9-86.2% | 3.1-60.0% | 3.7-62.2% | 2.6-19.8% | 3.1-44.5% |
a Daily exposure totals (in μg/kg/day) calculated (in ppb), except PCDD/Fs, which are presented as ng/kg/day; reference dosages are presented in same units. Top sources were calculated by taking the top three food contributors to each individual’s exposure (per contaminant) and summarizing across the population the five foods appearing most commonly in the 3 highest ranks. The n refers to the number of participants for whom that food was among the top three contributors to intake for the given contaminant. The percentage range is the minimum to maximum contribution, across all individuals reporting that food item, for each of the main food items to total intake of the given contaminant.
b Indicates a food subgroup. Dairy: all dairy and egg products; broccoli: broccoli, cauliflower, brussels sprouts; peaches: peaches, nectarines, plums; meat: beef, pork, lamb; poultry: chicken, turkey.
c canned sweet potatoes.
Figure 3Percent contribution of food group to contaminant load by cohort.