| Literature DB >> 35622550 |
Annick D van den Brand1, Bas G H Bokkers1, Jan Dirk Te Biesebeek1, Marcel J B Mengelers1.
Abstract
Humans are exposed to mycotoxins on a regular basis. Exposure to a mixture of mycotoxins may, therefore, result in a combination of adverse effects, or trigger the same effects. This should be accounted for when assessing the combined risk of multiple mycotoxins. Here, we show the outcome of using different approaches in assessing the risks related to the combined exposure to mycotoxins. We performed a tiered approach using assessment groups with a common target organ (kidney, liver and haematologic system), or a common adverse effect (phenomenon) (reduced white blood cell count), to combine the exposure to mycotoxins. The combined exposure was calculated for the individuals in this assessment, using the Monte Carlo Risk Assessment (MCRA) tool. The risk related to this combined exposure was assessed using toxicological reference values, e.g., health based guidance values. We show that estimating the combined risk by adding the single compounds' risk distributions slightly overestimates the combined risk in the 95th percentile, as compared to combining the exposures at an individual level. We also show that relative potency factors can be used to refine the mixture risk assessment, as compared to ratios of toxicological reference values with different effect sizes and assessment factors.Entities:
Keywords: MCRA; combined exposure; mixtures; mycotoxins; relative potency factors
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35622550 PMCID: PMC9145316 DOI: 10.3390/toxins14050303
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxins (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6651 Impact factor: 5.075
Figure 1Overview of the different approaches to combine the exposure and assess the risk of multiple compounds. HI; hazard index; HQ: hazard quotient; mRPI: modified reference point index; RPQ: reference point quotient; RPF: relative potency factors.
Assessment group nephrotoxicity.
| Mycotoxin | Effect | Critical | Reference Point (RP) | RP Type | Species | Study | AF | TRV | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Citrinin | No toxicologically significant alterations in liver and kidney were observed; the authors concluded that 20 μg citrinin/kg bw/d was not nephrotoxic | Yes | 20 | NOAEL | Rat | 90 days repeated dose | 10 × 10 × 2 |
| [ |
| Fumonisin | Kidney lesions (evidence of apoptosis and increased cell proliferation of the renal tubule epithelium/hyperplasia renal tubule epithelium) | No (megalocytic hepatocytes by EFSA) | 250/200 | NOAEL | Rat | Chronic/sub-chronic | 10 × 10 |
| [ |
| Nivalenol | Decreased kidney weight | No (reduced WBC by EFSA) | 660 | NOAEL | Mouse | Chronic | 10 × 10 |
| [ |
| Ochratoxin A | Increased incidence of non-neoplastic kidney lesions | Yes | 4.73 | BMDL10 | Pig | 90 days repeated dose | 10 × 10 × 2 |
| [ |
| Patulin | Slight impairment in kidney function | No (impaired growth by JECFA) | 800 | NOAEL | Rat | 90 days repeated dose | 10 × 10 × 2 |
| [ |
AF: assessment factor, TRV: toxicological reference value, NOAEL: no observed adverse effect level, BMDL10: lower limit of the benchmark dose related to 10% extra risk, WBC: white blood cell count, JECFA: Joint FAO/WHO Expert Committee on Food Additives. * TRVs not based on a previously derived HBGV and assessment factors were derived following Vejdovszky et al., 2019 [15].
Assessment group liver toxicity.
| Mycotoxin | Effect | Critical | Reference Point (RP) | RP Type | Species | Study | AF | TRV | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fumonisin B1-3 | Increased incidence of megalocytic hepatocytes | Yes | 100 | BMDL10 | Mouse | Chronic | 100 |
| [ |
| Zearalenone | Hepatocellular cytoplasmatic vacuolization | No (estrogenic effect EFSA) | 1000 | LOEL | Rat | Chronic | 10 × 10 × 3 |
| [ |
AF: assessment factor, TRV: toxicological reference value, BMDL10: lower limit of the benchmark dose corresponding to 10% extra risk, LOEL: lowest observed effect level. * TRVs not based on previously derived HBGV and assessment factors were derived following Vejdovszky et al., 2019 [15].
Assessment group haematological effects.
| Mycotoxin | Effect | Critical | Reference Point (RP) | RP Type | Species | Study | AF * | TRV | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Diacetoxyscirpenol | Expected to induce leukopenia, agranulocytosis, and anaemia | Yes | 65 | NOAEL | Human | Clinical study—not chronic | 10 × 10 |
| [ |
| Nivalenol | Haematological disturbances/reduced white blood cell count | Yes | 350 | BMDL05 | Rat | 90 days repeated dose | 10 × 10 × 2 1 |
| [ |
| Moniliformin | Haematological adverse effects (as decreased haematocrit and haemoglobin levels) | Yes | 200 | BMDL05 | Pig | 28 day sub-chronic | 10 × 10 × 2 |
| [ |
| T2/HT2 | Haematotoxicity—reduction in leukocyte count | Yes | 3.33 | BMDL10 | Rat | 90 days repeated dose | 10 × 10 × 2 |
| [ |
1 An additional assessment factor (AF) of 1.5 was used by EFSA to derive the HBGV, in tandem with the default 10 × 10 for extrapolation from animal studies and 2 for the extrapolation of subchronic to chronic study duration. The factor of 1.5 was used due to the limitations of the available data on reproductive and developmental toxicity of nivalenol. This latter AF was omitted for the derivation of a toxicological reference value for haematological effects. AF: assessment factor, TRV: toxicological reference value, NOAEL: no observed adverse effect level, BMDL05 and BMDL10: lower limit of the benchmark dose corresponding to 5 and 10% decrease in WBC. * Assessment factors used as derived by EFSA.
Individual (reference point quotients) and combined risk metrics at common target organ assessment groups– kidney, liver and haematological effects. Median (P50) and high (P95) estimated combined risk for 1–2 year olds, 2–6 year olds and 7–69 year olds in the lower bound (LB) and upper bound (UB) exposure scenarios.
| 1–2 Year Olds | 1–2 Year Olds | 2–6 Year Olds | 2–6 Year Olds | 7–79 Year Olds | 7–79 Year Olds | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| P50 (LB-UB)) | P95 (LB-UB)) | P50 (LB-UB)) | P95 (LB-UB) | P50 (LB-UB) | P95 (LB-UB) | |
| Nephrotoxicity | ||||||
| CIT | (0–0.42) | (0.45–1.0) | (0–0.74) | (0–1.4) | (0–0.34) | (0–1.0) |
| FB1 | (0–0.022) | (0.021–0.088) | (0–0.014) | (0–0.040) | (0–0.023) | (0.005–0.054) |
| FB2 | (0–0.021) | (0–0.084) | (0–0.014) | (0–0.040) | (0–0.023) | (0–0.053) |
| FB3 | (0–0.021) | (0–0.084) | (0–0.014) | (0–0.040) | (0–0.023) | (0–0.053) |
| NIV | (0.001–0.002) | (0.005–0.005) | (0–0.004) | (0–0.024) | (0–0.002) | (0–0.10) |
| OTA | (0.023–0.26) | (0.77–1.2) | (0–0.18) | (0.013–0.37) | (0.20–0.30) | (0.70–0.81) |
| PAT | (0–0.001) | (0–0.025) | (0–0.030) | (0–0.066) | (0–0.012) | (0–0.035) |
| Common organ risk index | (0.024–0.75) | (1.2–2.5) | (0–1.0) | (0.013–2.07) | (0.20–0.72) | (0.71–2.1) |
| mRPI (individually combined) | (0.06–0.89) | (0.93–2.0) | (0–1.0) | (0.013–1.8) | (0.20–0.75) | (0.70–1.8) |
| Liver toxicity | ||||||
| FB1 | (0–0.044) | (0.042–0.18) | (0–0.029) | (0–0.080) | (0–0.047) | (0.011–0.11) |
| FB2 | (0–0.041) | (0–0.17) | (0–0.029) | (0–0.080) | (0–0.047) | (0–0.11) |
| FB3 | (0–0.041) | (0–0.17) | (0–0.029) | (0–0.080) | (0–0.047) | (0–0.11) |
| ZEN | (0.001–0.007) | (0.006–0.018) | (0.001–0.005) | (0.001–0.010) | (0.001–0.003) | (0.001–0.008) |
| Common organ risk index | (0.001–0.13) | (0.048–0.53) | (0–0.092) | (0.001–0.25) | (0.001–0.14) | (0.011–0.33) |
| mRPI (individually combined) | (0.003–0.14) | (0.044–0.52) | (0.001–0.092) | (0.001–0.25) | (0.001–0.14) | (0.011–0.33) |
| Haematological effect | ||||||
| DAS | (0–0.002) | (0–0.004) | (0–0.004) | (0–0.008) | (0–0.003) | (0–0.008) |
| NIV | (0.005–0.006) | (0.017–0.020) | (0–0.013) | (0–0.092) | (0–0.009) | (0–0.38) |
| MON | (0–0.21) | (0–0.71) | (0.006–0.085) | (0.018–0.18) | (0.0013–0.034) | (0.007–0.11) |
| T2 toxin | (0.041–0.20) | (9.5–9.6) | (0.68–2.2) | (7.4–10) | (0.13–0.52) | (1.4–3.3) |
| HT2 toxin | (0.13–0.87) | (0.47–6.9) | (0–0.21) | (3.2–10) | (0–0.12) | (0.39–1.3) |
| Common organ risk index | (0.18–1.3) | (10–17) | (0.68–2.5) | (11–20) | (0.13–0.68) | (1.8–5.1) |
| mRPI (individually combined) | (0.29–1.6) | (9.6–16) | (0.69–2.7) | (10–19) | (0.14–0.84) | (1.7–4.5) |
Individual (reference point quotients) and combined risk metrics for common phenomenological effect assessment group– reduced white blood cells. Median and P95 estimated combined risk for 1–2 year olds, 2–6 year olds and 7–69 year olds in the lower bound (LB) and upper bound (UB) exposure scenarios.
| 1–2 Year Olds | 1–2 Year Olds | 2–6 Year Olds | 2–6 Year Olds | 7–79 Year Olds | 7–79 Year Olds | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| P50 (LB-UB) | P95 (LB-UB) | P50 (LB-UB) | P95 (LB-UB) | P50 (LB-UB) | P95 (LB-UB) | |
| DAS | (0–0.002) | (0–0.004) | (0–0.005) | (0–0.008) | (0–0.003) | (0–0.008) |
| NIV | (0.005–0.006) | (0.017–0.020) | (0–0.013) | (0–0.092) | (0–0.009) | (0–0.38) |
| T2 | (0.041–0.20) | (9.5–9.6) | (0.68–2.2) | (7.4—10) | (0.13—0.52) | (1.4—3.3) |
| HT2 | (0.13–0.87) | (0.48–6.9) | (0—0.21) | (3.2—10) | (0—0.12) | (0.39—1.3) |
| mRPI (sum) | (0.18–0.88) | (10–16) | (0.68–2.4) | (11–20) | (0.13–0.65) | (1.8–5.0) |
| mRPI (individually combined) | (0.53–1.4) | (9.6–16) | (0.68–2.6) | (10–19) | (0.13–0.80) | (1.7–4.5) |
Individual and combined risk metrics at the common effect assessment group of reduced white blood cells. Median (P50) and high (P95) estimated combined risk for 1–2 year olds, 2–6 year olds and 7–69 year olds in the lower bound (LB) and upper bound (UB) exposure scenarios. The combined risk was probabilistically calculated using relative potency factors to combine the exposure and with either nivalenol or T2/HT2 as a reference compound to assess the related risk.
| TRV µg/kg bw/d | 1–2 Year Olds | 1–2 Year Olds | 2–6 Year Olds | 2–6 Year Olds | 7–79 Year Olds | 7–79 Year Olds | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| P50 (LB-UB) | P95 (LB-UB) | P50 (LB-UB) | P95 (LB-UB) | P50 (LB-UB) | P95 (LB-UB) | ||
| NIV reference compound | 1.75 | (0.61–2.1) | (15–25) | (1.1–4.1) | (17–30) | (0.21–1.2) | (2.8–7.1) |
| T2/HT2 reference compound | 0.020 | (0.38–1.3) | (9.6–16) | (0.68–2.5) | (10–19) | (0.13–0.77) | (1.7–4.5) |
Overview of the model averaged BMD10 confidence interval (µg/kg bw/d) of nivalenol and T2/HT2 toxin.
| BMDL10 | BMDU10 | BMDU10/ | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nivalenol | 750 | 2700 | 3.5 |
| T2/HT2 toxin | 4.7 | 22 | 4.7 |
BMDL10: lower limit of the benchmark dose corresponding to 10% decrease in WBC. BMDU10: upper limit of the benchmark dose corresponding to 10% decrease in WBC.
Individual and combined risk metrics at the common effect assessment group of reduced white blood cells based on the new BMDL10s. Median (P50) and high (P95) estimated combined risk for 1–2 year olds, 2–6 year olds and 7–69 year olds in the lower bound (LB) and upper bound (UB) exposure scenarios. The combined risk was probabilistically calculated using relative potency factors to combine the exposure and with either nivalenol or T2/HT2 as a reference compound to assess the related risk.
| TRV New µg/kg bw/d | 1–2 Year Olds | 1–2 Year Olds | 2–6 Year Olds | 2–6 Year Olds | 7–79 Year Olds | 7–79 Year Olds | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| P50 (LB-UB) | P95 (LB-UB) | P50 (LB-UB) | P95 (LB-UB) | P50 (LB-UB) | P95 (LB-UB) | ||
| NIV as reference compound | 3.8 | (0.28–0.96) | (7.1–12) | (0.51–1.9) | (7.8–14) | (0.10–0.58) | (1.3–3.3) |
| T2/HT2 as reference compound | 0.024 | (0.32–1.1) | (8.1–13) | (0.58–2.2) | (8.9–16) | (0.11–0.66) | (1.5–3.8) |
Figure 2Refining the combined risk assessment of mycotoxins in the common phenomenological effect tier. HI: hazard index; mRPI: modified reference point index; RPFs: relative potency factor BMD: benchmark dose; BMR: benchmark response; MRA: mixture risk assessment.
Overview of mycotoxins in the total diet studies and the mycotoxins included in current assessment.
| Included in Assessment | Not Included in Current Assessment Because | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Carcinogenic/mutagenic | Not possible to obtain/derive a reference point or RPF for an effect at common target organ or effect | ||
| Aflatoxins | x | ||
| Alternaria toxins | x | ||
| Beauvericin | x | ||
| Citrinin | x | ||
| Deoxynivalenol (group) | x | ||
| Diacetoxyscirpenol | x | ||
| Enniatins | x | ||
| Ergot alkaloids | x | ||
| Fumonisins | x | ||
| Fusarenone-X | x | ||
| Moniliformin | x | ||
| Mycophenolic acid | x | ||
| Nitropropionic acid | x | ||
| Nivalenol | x | ||
| Ochratoxin A | x | ||
| Patulin | x | ||
| Roquefortine C | x | ||
| Sterigmatocystin | x | ||
| T2 + HT2 toxin | x | ||
| Zearalenone | x | ||
Input data used in the benchmark dose analysis to calculate the relative potency factor of T2/HT2 toxin compared to nivalenol.
| Dose | Compound | Sex | WBC ×100/µL | Sd | Sem | n | Comp.Sex |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | NIV | f | 38.8 | 7.7 | 2.566667 | 9 | niv.f |
| 400 | NIV | f | 30.5 | 10.1 | 3.1939 | 10 | niv.f |
| 1600 | NIV | f | 29.7 | 5.5 | 1.739253 | 10 | niv.f |
| 6400 | NIV | f | 19.6 | 4.5 | 1.423025 | 10 | niv.f |
| 0 | NIV | m | 38.5 | 12.2 | 3.857979 | 10 | niv.m |
| 400 | NIV | m | 37 | 12.2 | 3.857979 | 10 | niv.m |
| 1500 | NIV | m | 36.5 | 6.1 | 1.928989 | 10 | niv.m |
| 6900 | NIV | m | 21.6 | 3.9 | 1.3 | 9 | niv.m |
| 0 | T2HT2 | m | 148.3 | NA | 7.3 | 8 | T2HT2.m |
| 45 | T2HT2 | m | 89.5 | NA | 3.6 | 8 | T2HT2.m |
| 68 | T2HT2 | m | 69.2 | NA | 8.3 | 8 | T2HT2.m |
| 90 | T2HT2 | m | 52 | NA | 7.3 | 8 | T2HT2.m |
f: female, m: male, WBC: white blood cell count, sd: standard deviation, sem: standard error of the mean, n: number of animals in dose group. Note: dose nivalenol is expressed in mg/kg bw/d in the EFSA Scientific Opinion. Note: sem of nivalenol was calculated here from sd and n. Note: WBC of T2 in EFSA Scientific Opinion expressed as x1000/µL.
Figure A1Left pane: results of the benchmark dose analysis and the derivation of the relative potency factor of T2/HT2. The RPF of T2/HT2 toxin as compared to nivalenol is 137.4 (see legend), rounded as 140. Right pane: visualization of parallel curves by plotting the results after normalization to the background. Green line: T2 toxin, red line: nivalenol (males), black line: nivalenol (females). Red and black line exactly overlap in the right pane after correcting for background levels.
Figure A2Combined benchmark dose analysis of nivalenol (black line) and T2 toxin (red line) with a benchmark response of 10%.
Figure A3Model averaging results: nivalenol (black line) and T2 toxin (red line).
Total diet study (TDS) toddlers (12–36 months). Limits of detection (LODs) and quantification (LOQs) of the methods used for the analysis (in µg/kg analysis material, freeze-dried where applicable or in liquid form, for others) of mycotoxins in the relevant food subgroups.
| Mycotoxin | LOD (LOQ) 1 | Method 2 | Food Type and Number of Samples (n) |
|---|---|---|---|
| PAT | 5 (10) | LC-MS/MS | Apple (n = 3) |
| HT-2 | 0.2 (1) | GC-MS/MS | Bread (n = 3) |
| CIT | 8 (20) | Multi-toxin method LC-MS/MS | Bread (n = 3) |
1 LOD equals the LOQ if no number is mentioned between brackets. 2 GC-MS/MS: gas chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry; IAC-HPLC-FLD: immunoaffinity clean-up-high performance liquid chromatography-fluorescence detection; LC-MS/MS: liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry; LOD: limit of detection; LOQ: limit of quantification.
Total diet study (TDS) children (2–6 years) and 7–69 years old: Limits of detection (LODs) and quantification (LOQs) of the methods used for the analysis (in µg/kg analysis material, freeze-dried where applicable or in liquid form, for others) of mycotoxins in the relevant food subgroups. Limits of detection (LOD) and limits of quantification (LOQ) of the mycotoxin analyses. From Sprong et al., 2016.
| Toxin | 1 Method | Food Type and Number of Samples (n) | LOD | LOQ (µg/kg) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PAT | LC-MS/MS | Alcoholic drinks (n = 2) | 6.0 | 20 |
| DAS | GC-MS/MS | Alcoholic beverages (n = 2) | 0.3 | 1.0 |
| CIT | Multimethod | Alcoholic drinks (n = 2) | 6.7 | 20 |
1 IAC-HPLC-FLD: Immunoaffinity column-high pressure liquid chromatography-fluorescence; LC-MS/MS: Liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry; GC-MS/MS: Gas chromatography tandem mass spectrometry.
Median (P50) and high (P95) estimated exposure estimates (µg/kg/day) of the single mycotoxins for 1–2 year olds, 2–6 year olds and 7–69 year olds in the lower bound (LB) and upper bound (UB) exposure scenarios.
| 1–2 Year Olds | 1–2 Year Olds | 2–6 Year Olds | 2–6 Year Olds | 7–79 Year Olds | 7–79 Year Olds | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| P50 (LB-UB) | P95 (LB-UB) | P50 (LB-UB) | P95 (LB-UB) | P50 (LB-UB) | P95 (LB-UB) | |
| CIT | (0–0.042) | (0.045–0.10) | (0–0.074) | (0–0.14) | (0–0.033) | (0–0.10) |
| DAS | (0–0.001) | (0–0.003) | (0–0.003) | (0–0.005) | (0–0.002) | (0–0.005) |
| FB1 | (0–0.044) | (0.042–0.18) | (0–0.029) | (0–0.080) | (0–0.047) | (0.011–0.11) |
| FB2 | (0–0.041) | (0–0.17) | (0–0.029) | (0–0.080) | (0–0.045) | (0–0.11) |
| FB3 | (0–0.041) | (0–0.17) | (0–0.029) | (0–0.080) | (0–0.045) | (0–0.11) |
| HT2 toxin | (0.003–0.009) | (0.011–0.14) | (0–0.004) | (0.063–0.20) | (0–0.002) | (0.008—0.026) |
| MON | (0–0.21) | (0–0.71) | (0.006–0.085) | (0.018–0.18) | (0.001–0.034) | (0.007–0.11) |
| NIV | (0.008–0.011) | (0.030–0.036) | (0–0.024) | (0–0.16) | (0–0.016) | (0–0.67) |
| OTA | (0.001–0.006) | (0.019–0.028) | (0–0.004) | (0.001–0.009) | (0.005–0.007) | (0.017–0.019) |
| PAT | (0–0.002) | (0–0.098) | (0–0.12) | (0–0.27) | (0–0.047) | (0–0.14) |
| T2 toxin | (0.001–0.004) | (0.19–0.19) | (0.014–0.043) | (0.15–0.20) | (0.003—0.010) | (0.029—0.067) |
| ZEN | (0.003–0.024) | (0.020–0.059) | (0.001–0.017) | (0.001–0.033) | (0.001–0.009) | (0.002–0.027) |