| Literature DB >> 35424693 |
Zhentao Tang1, Zhiguo Gong2, Wei Jia3, Wenxuan Shen2, Qingrong Han4, Fang Fang2, Cheng Peng4.
Abstract
Phthalate esters (PAEs) are ubiquitous pollutants in the environment with toxicological and epidemiological effects for humans. As one of the daily necessities, edible plant oil is an important exposure source of PAEs, due to the inevitable contact with PAE-containing materials and the intrinsic lipid solubility of PAEs. However, limited information is currently available on the exposure risk of PAEs in commercial plant oil. This study was aimed at investigating the occurrence and risk assessment of PAEs in plant oils with a high-frequency import rate in west China. The analysis method was referenced to the Chinese national standard for the determination of PAEs in food. Results indicated that PAEs (mainly including DBP and DEHP) were ubiquitous contaminants in imported plant oils with the detectable rate being up to 56.83% in 366 samples. The detected concentrations were in the range of 0.10-3.20 mg kg-1 (median 0.28 mg kg-1) for dibutyl phthalate (DBP) and 0.25-1.95 mg kg-1 (median 0.44 mg kg-1) for bis(2-ethylhexyl)phthalate (DEHP). Based on an integrated probabilistic analysis method, the values of non-carcinogenic risk were lower than 1 in all cases, indicating that there would be an unlikely incremental non-carcinogenic risk to humans. Generally, the carcinogenic risk of DEHP was lower than the upper acceptable carcinogenic risk level (<10-4), while 50.40% of the carcinogenic risk exceeded the lower acceptable carcinogenic risk level (>10-6). Besides, diverse health risks were obviously shown and discussed for different categories of plant oils. The obtained results in this study could provide valuable information to understand the contamination status and health risk of PAEs in plant oil and improve the relative supervision and regulation. And the proposed strategy suggests a potential application for health risk assessment of other contaminants in food or even environments. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35424693 PMCID: PMC8982168 DOI: 10.1039/d2ra00578f
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 3.361
Recovery of the target PAEs in spiked sunflower seed oil samples at three different concentration levels
| PAEs | Low (0.5 mg kg−1) | Medium (1.5 mg kg−1) | High (3.0 mg kg−1) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Recovery (%) | RSD (%, | Recovery (%) | RSD (%, | Recovery (%) | RSD (%, | |
| BBP | 82.63 | 5.37 | 85.81 | 5.90 | 90.72 | 6.39 |
| DAP | 90.20 | 6.10 | 91.63 | 7.21 | 100.09 | 8.93 |
| DBP | 106.41 | 7.56 | 94.25 | 6.13 | 95.77 | 5.35 |
| DBEP | 87.80 | 6.12 | 86.37 | 8.36 | 91.35 | 6.94 |
| DCHP | 78.09 | 9.69 | 75.83 | 6.30 | 76.96 | 8.02 |
| DEP | 83.20 | 5.18 | 87.60 | 6.39 | 93.38 | 5.77 |
| DEEP | 83.10 | 7.35 | 87.80 | 5.31 | 98.51 | 6.57 |
| DEHP | 77.56 | 7.10 | 75.50 | 7.02 | 80.10 | 6.35 |
| DHP | 80.07 | 6.16 | 84.12 | 4.47 | 84.33 | 5.39 |
| DiBP | 81.85 | 6.74 | 86.05 | 6.67 | 91.10 | 5.79 |
| DMP | 75.06 | 8.37 | 85.71 | 8.53 | 90.23 | 6.37 |
| DMEP | 79.80 | 7.15 | 83.93 | 8.19 | 99.31 | 4.33 |
| DMPP | 79.11 | 8.17 | 85.80 | 9.21 | 90.20 | 7.50 |
| DNP | 88.80 | 5.25 | 80.43 | 4.36 | 77.82 | 4.65 |
| DnOP | 76.77 | 6.31 | 75.51 | 6.15 | 79.27 | 6.53 |
| DPP | 79.25 | 6.30 | 84.80 | 4.26 | 88.01 | 6.28 |
| DPhP | 83.70 | 5.29 | 79.43 | 8.70 | 83.90 | 7.52 |
Fig. 1Total ion chromatograms of a standard solution ((A), 0.5 μg mL−1) and a spiked sunflower seed oil sample ((B), 0.375 μg mL−1). 1, DMP; 2, DEP; 3, DAP; 4, DiBP; 5, DBP; 6, DMEP; 7, DMPP; 8, DEEP; 9, DPP; 10, DHP; 11, BBP; 12, DBEP; 13, DCHP; 14, DEHP; 15, DPhP; 16, DnOP; 17, DNP.
Statistical description of the contamination concentrations (mg kg−1) for the detectable PAEs
| PAEs | Min. | Max. | Mean ± SD | Median | Detectable rate (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DBP | 0.10 | 3.20 | 0.41 ± 0.40 | 0.28 | 56.83 |
| DEHP | 0.25 | 1.95 | 0.58 ± 0.40 | 0.44 | 21.58 |
One-sample Kolmogorov–Smirnov test of distribution of the PAEs concentrations
| DBP | DEHP | |
|---|---|---|
| Number | 208 | 79 |
| Mean | −0.51 | −0.31 |
| Std. dev. | 0.31 | 0.23 |
| Kolmogorov–Smirnov | 0.06 | 0.10 |
| Asymp. sig. (2-tailed) | 0.05 | 0.07 |
Kolmogorov–Smirnov tests were conducted based on the logarithms of the PAEs concentration values.
Classificatory distribution of the occurrence and contamination levels of the detected PAEs in 8 categories of plant oils
| Plant oil | DBP | DEHP | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Detected number/sample number | Concentration range (mg kg−1) | Mean ± SD (mg kg−1) | Detected number/sample number | Concentration range (mg kg−1) | Mean ± SD (mg kg−1) | |
| Crude rapeseed oil | 10/20 | 0.11–0.48 | 0.26 ± 0.15 | 0/20 | — | — |
| Crude sunflower seed oil | 5/23 | 0.13–0.44 | 0.25 ± 0.13 | 0/23 | — | — |
| Linseed oil | 6/26 | 0.16–0.95 | 0.35 ± 0.30 | 0/26 | — | — |
| Safflower oil | 28/34 | 0.12–2.09 | 0.65 ± 0.59 | 24/34 | 0.48–1.95 | 1.01 ± 0.52 |
| Sunflower seed oil | 54/82 | 0.10–2.20 | 0.33 ± 0.32 | 8/82 | 0.25–0.76 | 0.41 ± 0.15 |
| Virgin linseed oil | 27/54 | 0.10–0.66 | 0.30 ± 0.16 | 6/54 | 0.27–0.58 | 0.44 ± 0.11 |
| Virgin rapeseed oil | 58/87 | 0.10–3.20 | 0.47 ± 0.46 | 10/87 | 0.25–0.58 | 0.40 ± 0.14 |
| Virgin sunflower seed oil | 20/40 | 0.10–1.28 | 0.35 ± 0.30 | 1/40 | 0.25 | 0.25 |
Consumption of cooking oil described by gender and age in China (g day−1).[33]
| Group | Mean ( | P5 | P25 | P50 | P75 | P95 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||
| Male | 45.16 (37.12) | 7.91 | 22.25 | 36.15 | 57.8 | 110.37 |
| Female | 37.93 (29.97) | 6.39 | 18.5 | 30.81 | 48 | 94.73 |
|
| ||||||
| 18–44 | 39.74 (32.76) | 6.09 | 18.97 | 32.02 | 50.83 | 97.01 |
| 45–59 | 42.89 (34.58) | 8.15 | 21.25 | 34.23 | 53.38 | 104.64 |
| Total | 41.36 (33.74) | 7.08 | 20.02 | 33.1 | 52.25 | 101.2 |
Mean, maximum and percentiles of the EDI values of DBP and DEHP assessed by probabilistic analysis (ng (kg day)−1)
| PAEs | Male | Female | 18–44 | 45–59 | No classification | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DBP | Mean | 178.26 | 169.59 | 152.57 | 168.77 | 171.61 |
| 5th | 4.72 | 4.80 | 4.06 | 5.02 | 4.72 | |
| 50th | 63.23 | 63.32 | 60.91 | 66.06 | 63.97 | |
| 95th | 683.69 | 627.70 | 641.03 | 639.04 | 622.38 | |
| Maximum | 6364.77 | 7499.63 | 2943.61 | 4868.44 | 7942.13 | |
| DEHP | Mean | 148.04 | 143.09 | 141.89 | 146.84 | 150.35 |
| 5th | 6.33 | 5.91 | 6.07 | 6.49 | 6.24 | |
| 50th | 71.67 | 69.87 | 67.19 | 76.12 | 72.43 | |
| 95th | 556.73 | 485.02 | 501.77 | 585.56 | 534.10 | |
| Maximum | 5023.31 | 2498.50 | 2793.78 | 2541.92 | 3211.91 | |
Fig. 2The probability and cumulative probability distribution of carcinogenic risk for different populations.
Fig. 3Box plots of the individual and total non-carcinogenic risk induced by DBP and DEHP for different populations. Lower bound: the minimum values; midline: the median values; upper bound: the maximum values.
Fig. 4The probability and cumulative probability distribution of carcinogenic risk for different categories of plant oils.
Fig. 5Box plots of the individual and total non-carcinogenic risk for different categories of plant oils. Lower bound: the minimum values; midline: the median values; upper bound: the maximum values.