| Literature DB >> 24894065 |
Samantha E Serrano, Joseph Braun, Leonardo Trasande, Russell Dills, Sheela Sathyanarayana1.
Abstract
Phthalates are associated with a variety of health outcomes, but sources that may be targeted for exposure reduction messaging remain elusive. Diet is considered a significant exposure pathway for these compounds. Therefore, we sought to identify primary foods associated with increased exposure through a review of the food monitoring survey and epidemiological data. A search in PubMed and Google Scholar for keywords "phthalates" and "diet" "food" "food stuffs" "dietary intake" "food intake" and "food concentration" resulted in 17 studies measuring phthalate concentrations in United States (US) and international foods, three epidemiological association studies, and three interventions. We report on food groups with high (≥300 μg/kg) and low (<50 μg/kg) concentrations and compare these to foods associated with phthalate body burden. Based on these data, we estimated daily intakes of di-2-ethylhexyl phthalate (DEHP) of US women of reproductive age, adolescents and infants for typical consumption patterns as well as healthy and poor diets. We consistently observed high DEHP concentrations in poultry, cooking oils and cream-based dairy products (≥300 μg/kg) across food monitoring studies. Diethyl phthalate (DEP) levels were found at low concentrations across all food groups. In line with these data, epidemiological studies showed positive associations between consumption of meats, discretionary fat and dairy products and DEHP. In contrast to food monitoring data, DEP was found to be associated with intake of vegetables in two studies. DEHP exposure estimates based on typical diets were 5.7, 8.1, and 42.1 μg/kg-day for women of reproductive age, adolescents and infants, respectively, with dairy as the largest contributor to exposure. Diets high in meat and dairy consumption resulted in two-fold increases in exposure. Estimates for infants based on a typical diet exceeded the Environmental Protection Agency's reference dose of 20 μg/kg-day while diets high in dairy and meat consumed by adolescents also exceeded this threshold. The review of the literature demonstrated that DEHP in some meats, fats and dairy products is consistently found in high concentrations and can contribute to exposure. Guidance on future research in this area is provided that may help to identify methods to reduce dietary phthalate exposures.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24894065 PMCID: PMC4050989 DOI: 10.1186/1476-069X-13-43
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health ISSN: 1476-069X Impact factor: 5.984
Phthalate parent compounds and their metabolites
| Dimethyl phthalate | DMP | Mono-n-methyl phthalate | MnMP |
| Diethyl phthalate | DEP | Mono-ethyl phthalate | MEP |
| Di-isobutyl phthalate | DiBP | Mono-isobutyl phthalate | MiBP |
| Di-n-butyl phthalate | DnBP | Mono-n-butyl phthalate | MnBP |
| Di-n-octyl phthalate | DnOP | Mono-(3-carboxypropyl) phthalate | MCPP |
| Di-isononyl phthalate | DiNP | Mono-carboxyoctyl phthalate | MCOP |
| Di-isodecyl phthalate | DiDP | Mono-carboxynonyl phthalate | MCNP |
| Benzylbutyl phthalate | BzBP | Mono-benzyl phthalate | MBzP |
| Di-2-ethylhexyl phthalate | DEHP | Mono-2-ethylhexyl phthalate | MEHP |
| | | Mono-(2-ethyl-5-hydroxyhexyl) phthalate | MEHHP |
| | | Mono-(2-ethyl-5-oxohexyl) phthalate | MEOHP |
| Mono-(2-ethyl-5-carboxypentyl) phthalate | MECPP |
Epidemiological studies on dietary phthalate exposure
| Dickson-Spillman et al.
[ | Cross-sectional | German-Swiss general population (n = 1183) | Relationship between diet clusters and calculated internal phthalate exposure | DEHP - "fatty, sweet, and ready meal" cluster > all others | DEP – "health passive" < all others | |||||
| | DBP - "fatty, sweet, and ready meal" cluster > all others; "healthy and supplements">"health-passive" | | ||||||||
| | BzBP - 'healthy and natural" cluster > all others | | ||||||||
| Ji et al.
[ | Intervention – Quasi experimental | Participants in Temple Stay program (n = 25) | Influence of strict vegetarian diet on urinary phthalate metabolite concentrations | 5-oxo-MEHP - dairy | 5-oxo-MEHP (females only) - vegetarian diet | |||||
| | 5-OH-MEHP - dairy | 5-OH-MEHP - vegetarian diet | ||||||||
| | MEP - vegetarian diet | |||||||||
| | MnBP - vegetarian diet | |||||||||
| | MiBP - vegetarian diet | |||||||||
| Colacino et al.
[ | Cross-sectional | 2003-2004 NHANES | Association between consumption of various types of foods and urinary phthalate metabolite concentrations | MEHP - eggs, poultry | MEHHP - fruit | |||||
| | (n = 2374) | | MEOHP - fruit | |||||||
| | MEHHP - poultry | MECPP - fruit | ||||||||
| | Sum DEHP metabolites - fruit | |||||||||
| | MEOHP - poultry | MBzP - fruit, tomatoes | ||||||||
| | Sum of high molecular weight phthalates - fruit | |||||||||
| | MECPP - poultry | | ||||||||
| | Sum DEHP metabolites -poultry | | ||||||||
| | MCPP - dairy | | ||||||||
| | Sum of high molecular weight phthalates - poultry | | ||||||||
| | MEP - potatoes, tomatoes, total vegetables, meat | | ||||||||
| | MiBP - fish | | ||||||||
| | MnMP - fruit | | ||||||||
| | Sum of low molecular weight phthlates - tomatoes, total vegetables | | ||||||||
| | Total phthalates - total vegetables | | ||||||||
| Rudel et al.
[ | Intervention – Quasi experimental | Families w/two adults and two children | Contribution of food packaging to DEHP and BPA exposure through fresh, organic, and plastic-free dietary intervention | | MEHP - intervention | |||||
| | (n = 20) | | MEHHP - intervention | |||||||
| | | MEOHP – intervention | ||||||||
| | (no changes in MEP, MBP, MBzP) | |||||||||
| Sathyanarayana et al.
[ | Intervention –Two-arm, randomized study | Families w/two adults and two children | Efficacy of fresh, organic and plastic-free dietary intervention to reduce phthalate and BPA exposures | MEHP - intervention; dairy, spices | | |||||
| | | MEHHP - intervention; dairy, spices | | |||||||
| | Arm 1 – Intervention (n = 21) | | MEOHP - intervention; dairy, spices | | ||||||
| | MECPP - intervention; dairy, spices | | ||||||||
| | Arm 2 - Control (n = 19) | | Sum DEHP metabolites – intervention; dairy, spices | | ||||||
| | MEP - intervention | | ||||||||
| | MBP - intervention | | ||||||||
| Trasande et al.
[ | Cross-sectional | 2003-2008 NHANES children and adolescents (n = 2743) | Association between consumption of various types of foods and urinary phthalate metabolites in children and adolescents | MEHP - meat/poultry/fish, caloric intake; poultry | MEHP - fruit | |||||
| MEHHP - fruit, soy; soy | ||||||||||
| MEOHP - fruit, soy; soy | ||||||||||
| | MECPP - soy | |||||||||
| | Sum DEHP metabolites - fruit; soy | |||||||||
| | MBzP - fruit | |||||||||
| | MCPP - soy | |||||||||
| | Sum of high molecular weight phthalates - fruit; non-citrus fruit, soy | |||||||||
| | MEP - fruit, grain; fruit | |||||||||
| | MiBP - caloric intake | |||||||||
| | MBP - caloric intake | |||||||||
| | MEHHP - meat/poultry/fish, caloric intake; poultry, discretionary fat | Sum of low molecular weight phthalates - fruit, grain; citrus fruit | ||||||||
| | MEOHP - meat/poultry/fish, caloric intake; poultry, discretionary fat | | ||||||||
| | MECPP - meat/poultry/fish, caloric intake; discretionary fat | | ||||||||
| | Sum DEHP metabolite concentrations - meat/poultry/fish, caloric intake; caloric intake, poultry, discretionary solid fat | | ||||||||
| | MCPP - meat/poultry/fish; discretionary fat | | ||||||||
| | Sum of high molecular weight phthalates - meat/poultry/fish, caloric intake; caloric intake, poultry, discretionary solid fat | | ||||||||
| | MEP - vegetables | | ||||||||
| | MiBP - meat/poultry/fish | | ||||||||
| Sum of low molecular weight phthalates - vegetables | ||||||||||
Per capita total DEHP dietary intake for eight major food groups in average diets of US infants, adolescents and females of reproductive age
| Total dairy | 712.4 | 43.2 | 30.8 (73.1) | 5.5 | 3.9 (47.9) | 3.8 | 2.7 (47.2) |
| Total meat | 209.6 | 4 | 0.8 (2.0) | 2 | 0.4 (5.1) | 1.6 | 0.3 (5.8) |
| Total egg | 21.1 | 1.40d, e | 0.03 (0.1) | 0.25d, f | 0.01 (0.1) | 0.23d, g | 0.01 (0.1) |
| Total fish | 180.4 | 0.26 | 0.05 (0.1) | 0.13h | 0.02 (0.3) | 0.19 | 0.03 (0.6) |
| Total grain | 187.4 | 6.4 | 1.2 (2.8) | 2.4 | 0.5 (5.5) | 1.9 | 0.04 (6.2) |
| Total vegetable | 131.9 | 6.7 | 0.9 (2.1) | 2.3 | 0.3 (3.7) | 2.5 | 0.3 (5.8) |
| Total fruit | 115.6 | 7.8 | 0.9 (2.1) | 0.9 | 0.1 (1.3) | 1 | 0.1 (2.0) |
| Total fat | 1851.7 | 4 | 7.4 (17.6) | 1.6h, i | 3.0 (36.2) | 1i, j | 1.9 (32.3) |
| Total dietary intake | 3409.7 | 73.76 | 42.1 (100) | 15.08 | 8.2 (100) | 12.22 | 5.7 (100) |
a(Concentration in Food/1000) *Daily Food Consumption = Daily Intake.
bWeighted average of all available mean concentrations in foods corresponding to one of the eight food categories. Calculated by taking the sum of each average concentration multiplied by individual number of samples and diving by total number of samples: .
cSource NHANES 2003–2006.
dSource USDA CSFII 1994–1996, 1998.
eCalculated for a 11.4 kg infant.
fCalculated for adolescent under 19 years old and 56.8 kg.
gCalculated for female 20 and over and 70 kg.
h11 to <21 years.
iSource NHANES 2007.
jFemales 21 to <41 years.
Figure 1Per capita total DEHP intake (μg/kg-day) for four dietary patterns.