Dietary risk assessment of children and adults consuming fruit and vegetables with multiple pesticide residues
- PMID: 39631689
- DOI: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2024.143858
Dietary risk assessment of children and adults consuming fruit and vegetables with multiple pesticide residues
Abstract
Fruit and vegetables are a basic component of the human diet. European pesticide monitoring data indicated recently that in one sample multiple residues were detected which might be a public concern. Thus, the challenge of the present study was to assess the potential dietary exposure of the most critical EU children and adults subpopulations consuming fruit and vegetables. Overall, a total of 1182 samples 333 fruit and 849 vegetable samples from Polish production were monitored for the presence of 550 active substances during 2021-2023. Multiple pesticide occurrence was as follows: 2021-8%; 2022-12%; 2023-10%. In individual sample up to 11 pesticides were simultaneously detected in the range of 0.0052 mg kg-1 (fenpyroximate) - 7.10 mg kg-1 (difenoconazole). The top detected active substance was acetamiprid (neonicotinoid insecticide) and boscalid (carboxamide fungicide). The risk assessment occurring during a single day/meal to 28 detected pesticides was calculated. Acute exposure was low for fruit samples, despite a high frequency of many pesticides, e.g. cherries containing 11 pesticides (i.e. cyantraniliprole 35.5% ARfD for children, lambda-cyhalothrin 73.4% ARfD for adults). In the vegetable group, one dill sample containing not-approved chlorpyrifos could pose a risk to children (120.0% ARfD). Unacceptable risk to children's health (% ARfD>100) was assessed for a lettuce sample with 9 pesticides, including endocrine disruptors pyrethroids i.e. cypermethrin and deltamethrin. The model based on the worst-case scenario provided a margin for consumer safety. The approach showed that fruit and vegetables with multiple residues could not be considered a serious public health problem.
Keywords: Dietary exposure; Food safety; Mode of action; Pesticide residues; Public health.
Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.
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