4.3 Article

The Role of the Ecotoxicology Applied to Seafood as a Tool for Human Health Risk Assessments Concerning Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19031211

Keywords

PAH; petroleum derivates; organic compounds; marine ecosystem; toxicity assessments; environmental health; marine biota; fish products; mussels

Funding

  1. Fundacao de Amparo a Pesquisa do Rio de Janeiro (FAPERJ) [E-26/201.167/2020, E-26/210.442/2021, E-26/200.891/2021]
  2. FAPERJ

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This review examines the relationship between PAH effects on marine biota, environmental health status, and potential human health risks from consuming contaminated seafood. It found that mussels are the most evaluated bioindicator species, and benzo(a)pyrene and phenanthrene are the most investigated PAHs. However, there is a lack of multidisciplinary assessments that consider the link between environmental PAH dynamics, effects on aquatic biota, and human health risks.
Background: Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) are persistent pollutants routinely detected in aquatic ecosystems. It is, therefore, necessary to assess the link between deleterious marine biota PAH effects, especially in commercialized and consumed animals, environmental health status, and potential human health risks originating from the consumption of contaminated seafood products. Thus, this review seeks to verify the relationships of ecotoxicological studies in determining effect and safety concentrations on animals routinely consumed by humans. Methods: A total of 52 published studies between 2011 and 2021, indexed in three databases, were selected following the PICO methodology, and information on test animals, evaluated PAH, and endpoints were extracted. Results: Benzo(a)pyrene and phenanthrene were the most investigated PAHs in terms of biomarkers and test organisms, and mussels were the most evaluated bioindicator species, with an emphasis on reproductive responses. Furthermore, despite the apparent correlation between environmental PAH dynamics and effects on aquatic biota and human health, few assessments have been performed in a multidisciplinary manner to evaluate these three variables together. Conclusions: The links between human and environmental sciences must be strengthened to enable complete and realistic toxicity assessments as despite the application of seafood assessments, especially to mussels, in bioassays, the connection between toxicological animal responses and risks associated with their consumption is still understudied.

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