4.7 Article

Mineral oil risk assessment: Knowledge gaps and roadmap. Outcome of a multi-stakeholders workshop

Journal

TRENDS IN FOOD SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 113, Issue -, Pages 151-166

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE LONDON
DOI: 10.1016/j.tifs.2021.03.021

Keywords

Mineral oil hydrocarbon; Risk assessment; Exposure assessment; Food contaminant; MOSH; MOAH

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The key issue in the field of MOH risk analysis and management lies in the lack of standardized and validated analytical methods for good inter-laboratory reproducibility. There is also a major gap in exposure estimation due to limited surveys covering a wide range of foods and major sources of contamination other than packaging in paperboard. Additional toxicological studies are needed to better understand the hazards of MOH for a more comprehensive human health risk assessment.
Background: In recent years there have been significant advancements in the understanding of mineral oil hydrocarbons (MOH) in foods and their potential risk to health. However, important gaps in knowledge remain, such as the lack of validated and standardized analytical methods for relevant food matrices and gaps in assessing the risk for consumers' health. Scope & approach: A workshop was organized by the European Branch of the International Life Science Institute to identify knowledge gaps in analytical methods, assessment of exposure, hazard characterisation, and risk assessment of MOH. This work captures the outcome of the workshop and builds upon it by combining the perspectives of the participants with an updated review of the literature to provide a madmap for future management of the topic. Key findings and conclusions: Most participants to the workshop agreed that the key issue underlying many of the knowledge gaps in the field of MOH risk analysis and management is the lack of standardized, validated analytical methods able to assure good inter-laboratory reproducibility and to enable understanding of MOH occurrence in foods. It has been demonstrated that method EN 16995 used for MOH determination in vegetable oils and fats is not reliable below 10 mg/kg of food. There is also a need for confirmatory methods that provide a detailed characterization of the unresolved complex mixture observed from one-dimensional chromatographic methods. This is required to enable adequate substance identification and quantification for input into risk assessment. A major gap in the exposure estimation is the limited number of surveys covering a wide range of foods and enough samples to detect major sources of contamination other than packaging in paperboard. Data on concentration of MOH fractions in human body needed to determine internal exposure estimates is scarce. Data relating concentration in tissues with personal data, lifestyle, food intake and the use of cosmetics are needed to clarify the complex system of distribution of MOSH in the body and to possibly establish relationship between external and internal exposure. Additional toxicological studies to better characterize the hazards of relevant MOH are required for a better human health risk assessment.

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