| Literature DB >> 25106751 |
Karine Vin1, Alexandra Papadopoulos1, Francesco Cubadda2, Federica Aureli3, Hatice Imge Oktay Basegmez4, Marilena D'Amato3, Sam De Coster5, Laura D'Evoli6, María Teresa López Esteban7, Martina Jurkovic8, Massimo Lucarini6, Hayrettin Ozer4, Pedro Mario Fernández San Juan7, Isabelle Sioen5, Darja Sokolic8, Aida Turrini6, Véronique Sirot1.
Abstract
A method to validate the relevance of the Total Diet Study (TDS) approach for different types of substances is described. As a first step, a list of >2800 chemicals classified into eight main groups of relevance for food safety (natural components, environmental contaminants, substances intentionally added to foods, residues, naturally occurring contaminants, process contaminants, contaminants from packaging and food contact materials, other substances) has been established. The appropriateness of the TDS approach for the different substance groups has then been considered with regard to the three essential principles of a TDS: representativeness of the whole diet, pooling of foods and food analyzed as consumed. Four criteria were considered for that purpose (i) the substance has to be present in a significant part of the diet or predominantly present in specific food groups, (ii) a robust analytical method has to be available to determine it in potential contributors to the dietary exposure of the population, and (iii) the dilution impact of pooling and (iv) the impact of everyday food preparation methods on the concentration of the substance are assessed. For most of the substances the TDS approach appeared to be relevant and any precautions to be taken are outlined.Keywords: Chemical substances; Contaminants; Dietary intake; Exposure assessment; Population exposure; Total Diet Study
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25106751 DOI: 10.1016/j.fct.2014.07.035
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Food Chem Toxicol ISSN: 0278-6915 Impact factor: 6.023