Assessment of infant exposure to food chemicals: the French Total Diet Study design

Food Addit Contam Part A Chem Anal Control Expo Risk Assess. 2014;31(7):1226-39. doi: 10.1080/19440049.2014.921937. Epub 2014 Jun 5.

Abstract

As part of the previous French Total Diet Studies (TDS) focusing on exposure to food chemicals in the population aged 3 years and older, the French Agency for Food, Environmental and Occupational Health & Safety (ANSES) launched a specific TDS on infants to complete its overall chemical food safety programme for the general population. More than 500 chemical substances were analysed in food products consumed by children under 3 years old, including nutrients, several endocrine disruptors resulting from human activities (polychlorinated biphenyls, dioxins and furans, brominated flame retardants, perfluoroalkyl acids, pesticide residues, etc.) or migrating from food contact materials such as bisphenol A or phthalates, but also natural substances such as mycotoxins, phytoestrogens and steroids. To obtain a representative and general view of infant food consumption, food items were selected based on results of a national consumption survey conducted specifically on this population. Moreover, a specific study on food was conducted on 429 households to determine which home-cooking practices are employed to prepare food consumed by infants. Overall, the targeted chemical substances were analysed in more than 450 food samples, representing the purchase and home-cooking practices of over 5500 food products. Foods included common foods such as vegetables, fruit or cakes as well as specific infant foods such as infant formula or jarred baby food. The sampling plan covered over 80% of the total diet. Specificities in infant food consumption and habits were therefore considered to define this first infant TDS. This study, conducted on a large scale and focusing on a particularly sensitive population, will provide accurate information on the dietary exposure of children under 3 years to food chemicals, especially endocrine disruptors, and will be particularly useful for risk assessment analysis under the remit of ANSES' expert committees.

Keywords: Total Diet Study; dietary exposure assessment; endocrine disruptors; food chemicals; infant.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Cooking
  • Eating
  • Endocrine Disruptors / analysis
  • Endocrine Disruptors / toxicity
  • Environmental Pollutants / analysis
  • Environmental Pollutants / toxicity
  • Food Contamination / analysis*
  • Food Handling
  • Food Packaging
  • France
  • Humans
  • Infant
  • Infant Food / analysis*
  • Infant Food / toxicity
  • Nutrition Surveys
  • Pesticide Residues / analysis
  • Pesticide Residues / toxicity
  • Risk Assessment

Substances

  • Endocrine Disruptors
  • Environmental Pollutants
  • Pesticide Residues