4.4 Article

Scientific Opinion on the re-evaluation of tocopherol-rich extract (E 306), α-tocopherol (E 307), γ-tocopherol (E 308) and δ-tocopherol (E 309) as food additives

Journal

EFSA JOURNAL
Volume 13, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.2903/j.efsa.2015.4247

Keywords

tocopherol-rich extract (E 306); alpha-tocopherol (E 307), gamma-tocopherol (E 308); delta-tocopherol (E 309); food antioxidant; vitamin E

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The Panel on Food Additives and Nutrient Sources added to Food provides a scientific opinion re-evaluating the safety of tocopherol-rich extract of natural origin (E 306), synthetic alpha-tocopherol (all-rac-alpha-tocopherol; dl-alpha-tocopherol; E 307), synthetic. gamma tocopherol (dl-gamma-tocopherol; E 308) and synthetic delta-tocopherol (E 309). The European Union's Scientific Committee on Food did not set an Acceptable Daily Intake (ADI), but derived a Tolerable Upper Intake Level (UL) for vitamin E of 300 mg/day for adults. The Joint FAO/WHO Expert Committee on Food Additives (JECFA) derived an ADI of 0.15-2 mg/kg body weight (bw)/day for dl-alpha-tocopherol. The acute oral toxicity of tocopherols is low. In both a 13-week and a chronic (16-month) oral toxicity study, the No Observed Adverse Effect Level (NOAEL) was 125 mg/kg bw/day. The critical adverse effect is prolonged coagulation time. There is no concern that tocopherols are genotoxic or carcinogenic. There are insufficient data to address the reproduction and developmental toxicity. The Panel concluded that the available data are too limited to establish an ADI for the tocopherols. However, taking into account that vitamin E is widely consumed via human food, it is an essential nutrient and that the ULs are not exceeded in any population group, except in children in one survey from only one country, alpha-tocopherol, for the reported uses and use levels as a food additive, is not considered to be of safety concern. The Panel considered that the dataset on tocopherol-rich extract, and gamma-and d delta-tocopherol was too limited to be included in the safety assessment of tocopherols. Moreover, the Panel is aware that much lower concentration levels and fewer uses for gamma-and delta-tocopherol are reported in food than for alpha-tocopherol. Therefore, the Panel concluded that tocopherols (E 306E 309) are not of safety concern at the levels used in food. (C) European Food Safety Authority, 2015.

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