9 results on '"Lindtner, Oliver"'
Search Results
2. Expositionsschätzung von Stoffen in Lebensmitteln: Die BfR-MEAL-Studie – die erste Total-Diet-Studie in Deutschland
- Author
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Sarvan, Irmela, Bürgelt, Michaela, Lindtner, Oliver, and Greiner, Matthias
- Published
- 2017
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3. Dietary exposure to elements from the German pilot total diet study (TDS).
- Author
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Kolbaum, Anna Elena, Berg, Katharina, Müller, Frederic, Kappenstein, Oliver, and Lindtner, Oliver
- Subjects
MERCURY vapor ,DIET ,MERCURY ,REFERENCE values ,COPPER ,MANGANESE ,ALUMINUM - Abstract
Dietary exposure of the German adult population to the elements aluminium, copper, mercury (and as methylmercury), manganese and lead were assessed using data from the first total diet study (TDS) in Germany. In this pilot TDS, performed 2014–2015, 246 food samples were purchased in the Berlin area, prepared 'as consumed', and subsequently analysed. Dietary exposure for the German adult population between 14 and 80 years of age was estimated by combining TDS data with individual consumption data from the German National Consumption Survey II (NVS II). Estimated mean and high-level dietary exposure values showed that none of the elements analysed exceeded toxicological reference values; neither was there an undersupply of essential elements. Assessments for methylmercury and lead in women of child-bearing age, in particular, showed no considerable elevated intake levels. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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- View/download PDF
4. Towards a Harmonised Total Diet Study Approach: a guidance document:joint guidance of EFSA, FAO and WHO
- Author
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Peltonen, Kimmo, Charrondiere, Ruth, Georgescu, Ioana Madalina, Kambek, Liis, Lombardi-Boccia, Ginevra, Lindtner, Oliver, Marcos Suarez, Victoria, Oliveira, Luísa, Ruprich, Jirí, Shavila, Joseph, Sirot, Veronique, and Verger, Philippe
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Dietary Exposure ,Total Diet Study ,Segurança Alimentar ,Harmonisation ,Contaminants ,Nutrients - Abstract
A Total Diet Study (TDS) can be a complementary approach to traditional monitoring and surveillance programs, which instead of focusing on compliance is designed to provide a solid basis for calculating population dietary exposure and assessing potential impact on public health. A TDS includes the selection of foods based on food consumption data to represent a large portion of a typical diet, their preparation to food as consumed and the subsequent pooling of related foods before analysis. There is already a wealth of international TDS data available, but to better enable comparisons it is important that methods are harmonised to the extent possible. The Working Group of experts provides a definition of the TDS approach highlighting its inherent value; it gives guidance for a harmonised methodology starting from the TDS planning to the collection of analytical results, exposure assessment calculation and communication of TDS results; and it proposes a general approach to facilitate the use of TDS information at international level. A TDS can be used for screening purposes or as a more refined exposure assessment tool. It provides background concentration and exposure levels of chemical substances in a range of representative foods prepared for consumption, while monitoring and surveillance programs can better capture highly contaminated individual food items. Their complementarities would allow the identification of the relative importance of individual sources of chemical substances from the whole diet. In conclusion, a TDS is considered to be a good complement to existing food monitoring or surveillance programs to estimate population dietary exposure to beneficial and harmful chemical substances across the entire diet. Harmonising the TDS methodology will enhance the value of these programs by improving the comparability at international level.
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- 2011
5. Development of harmonised food and sample lists for total diet studies in five European countries.
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Dofkova, Marcela, Nurmi, Tanja, Berg, Katharina, Reykdal, Ólafur, Gunnlaugsdóttir, Helga, Vasco, Elsa, Dias, Maria Graça, Blahova, Jitka, Rehurkova, Irena, Putkonen, Tiina, Ritvanen, Tiina, Lindtner, Oliver, Desnica, Natasa, Jörundsdóttir, Hrönn Ó., Oliveira, Luísa, and Ruprich, Jiri
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PUBLIC health ,FOOD composition ,FOOD consumption ,NUTRITION surveys - Abstract
A total diet study (TDS) is a public health tool for determination of population dietary exposure to chemicals across the entire diet. TDSs have been performed in several countries but the comparability of data produced is limited. Harmonisation of the TDS methodology is therefore desirable and the development of comparable TDS food lists is considered essential to achieve the consistency between countries. The aim of this study is to develop and test the feasibility of a method for establishing harmonised TDS food and sample lists in five European countries with different consumption patterns (Czech Republic, Finland, Germany, Iceland and Portugal). The food lists were intended to be applicable for exposure assessment of wide range of chemical substances in adults (18–64 years) and the elderly (65–74 years). Food consumption data from recent dietary surveys measured on individuals served as the basis for this work. Since the national data from these five countries were not comparable, all foods were linked to the EFSA FoodEx2 classification and description system. The selection of foods for TDS was based on the weight of food consumed and was carried out separately for each FoodEx2 level 1 food group. Individual food approach was respected as much as possible when the TDS samples were defined. TDS food lists developed with this approach represented 94.7–98.7% of the national total diet weights. The overall number of TDS samples varied from 128 in Finland to 246 in Germany. The suggested method was successfully implemented in all five countries. Mapping of data to the EFSA FoodEx2 coding system was recognised as a crucial step in harmonisation of the developed TDS food lists. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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6. Assessment of long-term dietary cadmium exposure in children in Germany: Does consideration of data from total diet studies reduce uncertainties from food monitoring programmes?
- Author
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Kolbaum, Anna Elena, Jung, Christian, Jaeger, Anna, Libuda, Lars, and Lindtner, Oliver
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REDUCING diets , *CADMIUM , *CONSUMER behavior , *FOOD combining , *MISSING data (Statistics) , *FOOD safety , *CHILDHOOD obesity - Abstract
Total diet studies (TDS) and food monitoring programmes are different approaches for collecting occurrence data on substances in food. This case study evaluated the practical applicability of TDS data (BfR MEAL Study) and monitoring data for the assessment of long-term cadmium exposure in children in Germany. Cadmium data from both programmes were combined with food consumption data from the KiESEL study. Uncertainties associated with both assessments were systematically described. Using monitoring data resulted in cadmium intakes approximately 3 times higher than the use of BfR MEAL Study data. Incomplete data and neglect of market shares and consumption weights were considered by conservative data adjustments to the monitoring data and mainly explain the higher estimates. Fewer data adjustments were necessary for BfR MEAL Study data, which covered almost the entire diet and considered consumer behaviour during sample collection and sample preparation. In sum, the use of the BfR MEAL Study data resulted in less uncertainty and more reliable exposure estimates for chronic assessments over the entire diet. However, description of variability and upper tails of substance distributions in food remain essential features of monitoring data. The integration of both programmes into a complementary system further improves food safety. • Food monitoring overestimated cadmium intake, while TDS led to more reliable exposure estimates. • TDS data required less data processing, resulting in lower uncertainty. • Food monitoring provided incomplete and less representative coverage of diet. • Food monitoring can contribute information on variability to exposure scenarios. • Combining TDS and food monitoring in a common system improves food safety. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. TDS exposure project: How and when to consider seasonalityin a total diet study?
- Author
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Fabrice Elegbede, Chabi, Papadopoulos, Alexandra, Kolbaum, Anna Elena, Turrini, Aida, Mistura, Lorenza, Lindtner, Oliver, and Sirot, Véronique
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FOOD chemistry , *DETECTION limit , *RISK assessment , *MYCOTOXINS - Abstract
Seasonality is a key issue of total diet studies (TDS), as season may impact consumption patterns and concentrations of food chemicals, then exposure levels. This work aimed at analyzing the impact on dietary exposure of different options of seasonality management, to propose guidelines for TDS sampling. Dietary exposure to nine chemicals was assessed for adults and children from the second French Individual and National Food Consumption Survey: arsenic, copper, manganese, dioxins, furans, dioxin-like and non dioxin-like PCBs, deoxinivalenol and ochratoxin A. Seasonality was considered either in both consumption and concentration data, consumption data only, or concentration data only. Results showed significant differences between exposures during different seasons. For most chemicals, the difference between seasonal exposures may not be mainly driven by seasonality of consumption, but partly by seasonality of concentration. Results on risk assessment remained generally the same. If the main objective of the TDS is the risk assessment, considering season for sampling could be costly but with a low added value in terms of results. For exposure refinement, season has to be considered in the sampling design. More particularly, seasonal samples should be kept separately for chemicals with expected seasonal variation in concentrations, such as some metals or mycotoxins. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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8. Long-term dietary exposure to copper in the population in Germany – Results from the BfR MEAL study.
- Author
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Kolbaum, Anna Elena, Sarvan, Irmela, Bakhiya, Nadiya, Spolders, Markus, Pieper, Robert, Schubert, Jens, Jung, Christian, Hackethal, Christin, Sieke, Christian, Grünewald, Karl-Hermann, and Lindtner, Oliver
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COPPER , *DIETARY supplements , *ORGANIC foods , *FOOD safety , *COPPER analysis - Abstract
The German Total Diet Study (BfR MEAL Study) measured copper in 356 foods. In 105 of these foods copper was determined separately for conventionally and organically pooled samples. Mammalian liver, nuts, oilseeds, cocoa powder and chia seeds contained the highest copper levels. Organically produced foods tended to have higher levels compared to conventionally produced foods. Children's copper exposure was between 0.04 mg/kg body weight per day (mg/kg bw/day) and 0.07 mg/kg bw/day (median). High exposure (95th percentile) ranged between 0.07 mg/kg bw/day and 0.11 mg/kg bw/day. Adult's exposure ranged between 0.02 mg/kg bw/day (median) and 0.04 mg/kg bw/day (95th percentile). Grains and grain-based products were main contributors for all age groups. Copper intake was about 10% higher in a scenario where consumers select the organically produced variants. Children's median and high exposure was above the acceptable daily intake (ADI) of 0.07 mg/kg bw/day set by the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA). However, according to EFSA's evaluation this is not of concern due to higher requirement related to growth. For adults, frequent consumers of mammalian liver exceeded the ADI in median and 95th percentile. Intake of copper-containing dietary supplements may also lead to exceedance of the ADI in all age groups. [Display omitted] • Analysis of copper in 356 foods of the BfR MEAL Study. • Total dietary exposure to copper for children and adults in Germany. • Effect of organic food production was visible but affected exposure marginally. • Only consumers of mammalian liver exceeded the acceptable daily intake. • Additional intake from dietary copper supplements can lead to exposure above the ADI. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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9. Exposure assessment of methylmercury in samples of the BfR MEAL Study.
- Author
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Sarvan, Irmela, Kolbaum, Anna Elena, Pabel, Ulrike, Buhrke, Thorsten, Greiner, Matthias, and Lindtner, Oliver
- Subjects
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METHYLMERCURY , *SEBASTES marinus , *SEAFOOD , *FOOD safety , *MEALS - Abstract
The BfR MEAL Study is the first German total diet study and will establish a representative and comprehensive database for dietary exposure assessment in Germany. The present study reports first results of the BfR MEAL Study regarding methylmercury in fish, seafood and mushrooms. In total, 34 MEAL foods were purchased nationally or regionally according to a defined sampling plan, prepared in a representative way for German households, pooled into 49 samples, homogenized and subjected to ICP-MS analysis. Dogfish, tuna, ocean perch, halibut and eel were the fish species with highest MeHg concentrations, while levels in mushrooms and mushroom products had markedly lower MeHg levels. Exposure was estimated by matching the present results with consumption data at appropriate levels of food group aggregation. MeHg exposure for adult high consumers (P 95) exceeded the tolerable weekly intake recommended by the European Food Safety Authority in two age groups (14–17 and 18–24 years). In children, no age group exceeded the recommended tolerable weekly intake. Regional samples differed only slightly in MeHg levels. The differences in exposure found in four regions of Germany were influenced by consumption habits rather than MeHg level in the investigated food. • Dietary exposure of methylmercury to German population was assessed by TDS approach. • For adults, exposure of high consumers (P95) in two age groups (14–18 years and 19–24 years) exceed the TWI. • Exposure assessment of high consumers (P95) for children is not exceeding the TWI in any age group. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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