Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/113960
Title: Microplastics as Emerging Food Contaminants: A Challenge for Food Safety
Authors: Rubio-Armendáriz, Carmen
Alejandro-Vega, Samuel
Paz-Montelongo, Soraya
Gutiérrez-Fernández, Ángel J.
Carrascosa Iruzubieta, Conrado Javier 
Hardisson-de la Torre, Arturo
UNESCO Clasification: 330915 Higiene de los alimentos
Keywords: Dietary Mps
Exposure Assessment
Hazard Characterization
Hazard Identification
Microplastics, et al
Issue Date: 2022
Journal: International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 
Abstract: Microplastics (MPs) have been identified as emerging environmental pollutants classified as primary or secondary based on their source. Composition, shape, size, and colour, among other characteristics, are associated with their capacity to access the food chain and their risks. While the environmental impact of MPs has received much attention, the risks for humans derived from their dietary exposure have not been yet assessed. Several institutions and researchers support that the current knowledge does not supply solid data to complete a solid risk characterization of dietary MPs. The aim of this paper is to review the current knowledge about MPs in foods and to discuss the challenges and gaps for a risk analysis. The presence of MPs in food and beverages has been worldwide observed, but most authors considered the current data to be not only insufficient but of questionable quality mainly because of the outstanding lack of consensus about a standardized quantifying method and a unified nomenclature. Drinking water, crustaceans/molluscs, fish, and salt have been identified as relevant dietary sources of MPs for humans by most published studies. The hazard characterization presents several gaps concerning the knowledge of the toxicokinetic, toxicodynamic, and toxicity of MPs in humans that impede the estimation of food safety standards based on risk. This review provides a tentative exposure assessment based on the levels of MPs published for drinking water, crustaceans and molluscs, fish, and salt and using the mean European dietary consumption estimates. The intake of 2 L/day of water, 70.68 g/day of crustaceans/molluscs, 70.68 g/day of fish, and 9.4 g/day of salt would generate a maximum exposure to 33,626, 212.04, 409.94 and 6.40 particles of MPs/day, respectively. The inexistence of reference values to evaluate the MPs dietary intake prevents the dietary MPs risk characterization and therefore the management of this risk. Scientists and Food Safety Authorities face several challenges but also opportunities associated to the occurrence of MPs in foods. More research on the MPs characterization and exposure is needed bearing in mind that any future risk assessment report should involve a total diet perspective.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/113960
ISSN: 1660-4601
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19031174
Source: International journal of environmental research and public health [EISSN 1660-4601], v. 19 (3), 1174, (Enero 2022)
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