4.7 Article

Acrylamide Content in Breast Milk: The Evaluation of the Impact of Breastfeeding Women's Diet and the Estimation of the Exposure of Breastfed Infants to Acrylamide in Breast Milk

Journal

TOXICS
Volume 9, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/toxics9110298

Keywords

breast milk; acrylamide; LC-MS/MS; infants; exposure

Funding

  1. National Science Center [N N404 067740]
  2. National Institute of Public Health, NIH-National Research Institute [FZ. -2/2021]

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The study found that the level of acrylamide in colostrum was significantly lower than in mature milk, and that breastfeeding women had significantly lower acrylamide intake from hospital diets compared to home diets. There was a positive correlation between dietary acrylamide intake by breastfeeding women and its content in breast milk.
Acrylamide in food is formed by the Maillard reaction. Numerous studies have shown that acrylamide is a neurotoxic and carcinogenic compound. The aim of this study was to determine the level of acrylamide in breast milk at different lactation stages and to evaluate the impact of breastfeeding women's diet on the content of this compound in breast milk. The acrylamide level in breast milk samples was determined by LC-MS/MS. Breastfeeding women's diet was evaluated based on the 24 h dietary recall. The median acrylamide level in colostrum (n = 47) was significantly (p < 0.0005) lower than in the mature milk (n = 26)-0.05 mu g/L and 0.14 mu g/L, respectively. The estimated breastfeeding women's acrylamide intake from the hospital diet was significantly (p < 0.0001) lower than that from the home diet. We found positive-although modest and borderline significant-correlation between acrylamide intake by breastfeeding women from the hospital diet mu g/day) and acrylamide level in the colostrum (mu g/L). Acrylamide has been detected in human milk samples, and a positive correlation between dietary acrylamide intake by breastfeeding women and its content in breast milk was observed, which suggests that the concentration can be reduced. Breastfeeding women should avoid foods that may be a source of acrylamide in their diet.

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