4.7 Article

Dietary intake of acrylamide in the Norwegian EuroMix biomonitoring study: Comparing probabilistic dietary estimates with haemoglobin adduct measurements

Journal

FOOD AND CHEMICAL TOXICOLOGY
Volume 180, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.fct.2023.114031

Keywords

Haemoglobin adducts; Probabilistic modelling; Acrylamide; Exposure; Internal dose; Food consumption data

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This study compared acrylamide intake measurements obtained from haemoglobin adduct levels and self-registered dietary consumption data. The results showed good agreement between the two methods and were consistent with previous dietary estimates in the Norwegian population. The Margin of Exposure indicated a possible health risk concern from dietary acrylamide.
Acrylamide is a probable human carcinogen with widespread exposure via food. The present study compared acrylamide intake measurements obtained from haemoglobin adduct levels and self-registered dietary consumption data in a group of 144 Norwegian healthy adults. Acrylamide adducts to N-terminal valine in haemoglobin were measured and used to estimate the intake via the internal dose approach which showed a median (interquartile range) of 0.24 (0.19-0.30) mu g/kg bw/day. Data from weighed food records and food frequency questionnaires from the same individuals were used for probabilistic modelling of the intake of acrylamide. The median acrylamide intake was calculated to be 0.26 (0.16-0.39) and 0.30 (0.23-0.39) mu g/kg bw/day, respectively from the two sources of self-registered dietary consumption data. Overall, a relatively good agreement was observed between the methods in pairwise comparison in Bland-Altman plots, with the methods disagreeing with 7% or less of the values. The intake estimates obtained with the two dietary consumption methods and one biomarker method are in line with earlier dietary estimates in the Norwegian population. The Margin of Exposure indicate a possible health risk concern from dietary acrylamide. This is the first study with a comparison in the same individuals of acrylamide intake estimates obtained with these methods.

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