4.5 Article

Potential health hazards due to the occurrence of the mycotoxin tenuazonic acid in infant food

Journal

EUROPEAN FOOD RESEARCH AND TECHNOLOGY
Volume 236, Issue 3, Pages 491-497

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00217-012-1901-x

Keywords

Tenuazonic acid; Mycotoxin; Infant food; Stable isotope dilution assay; LC-MS/MS

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The mycotoxin tenuazonic acid (TA) was analyzed in different infant foods and beverages including tea infusions (fruit, herbal and fennel tea), puree infant food in jars (complementary food and side dishes) and infant cereals (for preparation of meals after addition of water or milk) by means of a stable isotope dilution assay (SIDA). The median content of TA in infant tea infusions (n = 12) was 2 mu g/L, but values up to 20 mu g/L were found in fennel tea infusions. In puree infant food in jars (n = 12), the median content of TA was 7 mu g/kg, but higher values were detected in products containing tomato (25 mu g/kg), banana and cherry (80 mu g/kg) and sorghum (20 mu g/kg). Infant cereals on the basis of wheat and/or oats, rice, spelt and barley (n = 4) did not contain TA in values higher than 30 mu g/kg, but if sorghum was the major ingredient (n = 12), the mean content of TA was 550 mu g/kg and the maximum level was 1,200 mu g/kg. The European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) evaluated the toxicological potential of TA by following the threshold of toxicological concern (TTC) approach yielding a TTC value of 1,500 ng TA/kg body weight per day. Although long-term studies are needed to enlarge the database on TA contamination of sorghum-based infant food, our preliminary study points out to a tendency that the TTC value may be exceeded by infants consuming predominantly sorghum-based food. Nevertheless, further toxicity data on TA are required with high priority to assess potential health hazards.

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