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Challenges in risk assessment of multiple mycotoxins in food
Author(s) -
Ricardo Assunção,
Maria João Silva,
Paula Alvito
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
world mycotoxin journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.569
H-Index - 35
eISSN - 1875-0796
pISSN - 1875-0710
DOI - 10.3920/wmj2016.2039
Subject(s) - risk assessment , mycotoxin , toxicodynamics , hazard , risk analysis (engineering) , hazard analysis , human health , exposure assessment , computer science , toxicokinetics , environmental science , biochemical engineering , environmental health , microbiology and biotechnology , business , biology , engineering , medicine , bioinformatics , ecology , computer security , pharmacokinetics , aerospace engineering
Review articleMost fungi are able to produce several mycotoxins simultaneously and, consequently, to contaminate a wide variety of foodstuffs. Therefore, the risk of human co-exposure to multiple mycotoxins is real, raising a growing concern about their potential impact on human health. Besides, government and industry regulations are usually based on individual toxicities, and do not take into account the complex dynamics associated with interactions between co-occurring groups of mycotoxins. The present work assembles, for the first time, the challenges posed by the likelihood of human co-exposure to these toxins and the possibility of interactive effects occurring after absorption, towards knowledge generation to support a more accurate human risk assessment. Regarding hazard assessment, a physiologically-based framework is proposed in order to infer the health effects from exposure to multiple mycotoxins in food, including knowledge on the bioaccessibility, toxicokinetics and toxicodynamics of single and combined toxins. The prioritisation of the most relevant mixtures to be tested under experimental conditions that attempt to mimic human exposure and the use of adequate mathematical approaches to evaluate interactions, particularly concerning the combined genotoxicity, were identified as the main challenges for hazard assessment. Regarding exposure assessment, the need of harmonised food consumption data, availability of multianalyte methods for mycotoxin quantification, management of left-censored data, use of probabilistic models and multibiomarker approaches are highlighted, in order to develop a more precise and realistic exposure assessment. To conclude, further studies on hazard and exposure assessment of multiple mycotoxins, using harmonised methodologies, are crucial towards an improvement of data quality and a more reliable and robust risk characterisation, which is central for risk management and, consequently, to prevent mycotoxins-associated adverse effects. A deep understanding of the nature of interactions between multiple mycotoxins will contribute to draw real conclusions on the health impact of human exposure to mycotoxin mixtures.This research was performed under the MycoMix project ‘Exploring the toxic effects of mixtures of mycotoxins in infant food and potential health impact’ (PTDC/DTP-FTO/0417/2012), through CESAM: UID/AMB/50017/2013 and ToxOmics: UID/BIM/00009/2013, all funded by the Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia (FCT), Portugal.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

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