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Residues of glyphosate in food and dietary exposure

Journal

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1541-4337.12822

Keywords

Analytical chemistry; Glyphosate; Pesticide exposure; Risk assessment; Urinary pesticide

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Glyphosate, the active ingredient in Roundup(R) brand herbicides, has been tested for residues in food and the majority of residues are below safety standards, not due to agricultural practices or GM crop usage. regulatory agency surveys indicate that 99% of glyphosate residues in food are below the European MRLs or EPA tolerances.
Glyphosate is the active ingredient in Roundup(R) brand nonselective herbicides, and residue testing for food has been conducted as part of the normal regulatory processes. Additional testing has been conducted by university researchers and nongovernmental agencies. Presence of residues needs to be put into the context of safety standards. Furthermore, to appropriately interpret residue data, analytical assays must be validated for each food sample matrix. Regulatory agency surveys indicate that 99% of glyphosate residues in food are below the European maximum residue limits (MRLs) or U.S. Environmental Protection Agency tolerances. These data support the conclusion that overall residues are not elevated above MRLs/tolerances due to agricultural practices or usage on genetically modified (GM) crops. However, it is important to understand that MRLs and tolerances are limits for legal pesticide usage. MRLs only provide health information when the sum of MRLs of all foods is compared to limits established by toxicology studies, such as the acceptable daily intake (ADI). Conclusions from dietary modeling that use actual food residues, or MRLs themselves, combined with consumption data indicate that dietary exposures to glyphosate are within established safe limits. Measurements of glyphosate in urine can also be used to estimate ingested glyphosate exposure, and studies indicate that exposure is <3% of the current European ADI for glyphosate, which is 0.5 mg glyphosate/kg body weight. Conclusions of risk assessments, based on dietary modeling or urine data, are that exposures to glyphosate from food are well below the amount that can be ingested daily over a lifetime with a reasonable certainty of no harm.

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