Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7619701 | Journal of Food Composition and Analysis | 2018 | 42 Pages |
Abstract
Polybrominated diphenyl ether (PBDE) flame retardants contaminate the food supply yet health effects are uncertain. A global PBDE database was developed to improve diet and disease risk assessments. Congener-specific data from 2002 to 2015 were extracted from 86 articles into a source database representing 32 countries. Geometric mean PBDE concentrations for foods and supplements were derived for 11 congeners individually and combined, and used to calculate means for 27 dietary groups (pg/g ww). Dark or oily fish had the highest data availability, followed by shellfish, eggs, dairy products and dairy fats. Data were less available for white or lean fish, red meat, poultry meat, processed meats, fish oil supplements; 17 groups had very limited data. At the group level, mean â11PBDE was extremely high for fish oil supplements (13,862â¯pg/g) and high for most aquatic groups (462-837â¯pg/g), poultry liver, poultry fat (1045-1860â¯pg/g). Moderate groups included white or lean fish, poultry meat, poultry skin, eggs, baked products, red meat fat, red meat liver (115-414â¯pg/g). Dairy and plant groups had low PBDE concentrations. â11PBDE variability was high within most aquatic groups. This database supports assessment of dietary PBDE in multiple jurisdictions and identifies important sources for dietary tool inclusion and analyses.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
Analytical Chemistry
Authors
Beatrice A. Boucher, Julie K. Ennis, Dina Tsirlin, Shelley A. Harris,