Reviewing the Chinese-Specific Reference Amounts Study Conducted by Sun et al., 2022.

W Marty Blom, Joost Westerhout, Geert F Houben
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In their examination of Chinese food consumption data, the authors find that “the 95th–99th percentiles of the food consumption distribution per eating occasion for condiments and chocolates are the optimal point estimates for use in deterministic allergen RA, aiming to protect 99% of allergic individuals from allergic reactions due to unintended peanut presence.” This finding significantly deviates from those of Blom et al., which suggested that the 50th–75th percentiles of the food consumption distribution per eating occasion in various global contexts would suffice for achieving a similar safety objective aimed at protecting 95%–99% of allergic individuals from objective allergic reactions due to unintended allergen presence (3–4). While a more cautious approach to consumption estimations may appear safe from a risk management perspective, such an approach could involve a degree of overprotection that may result in unwarranted restrictions for both the Chinese food-allergic population and the food industry. Achieving a balance between guaranteeing safety and implementing realistic, pragmatic protocols is vital (1). Thus, a risk assessment that incorporates unnecessary high-intake figures may not provide risk managers with the most effective information(5). Hence, we evaluated the potential causes of the elevated P-values discovered in the study by Sun et al. (2). We focused on identifying elements that could significantly augment the sensitivity analysis, ultimately leading to the establishment of a more robust food intake estimation for China. Several factors in the data utilized by Sun et al. (2) could be contributing to the observed elevated P-values (Table 1), thus likely resulting in an excessively conservative outcome, more so than what was projected when the sensitivity analysis method was initially applied. For instance, the food consumption distribution employed in the study lacks the necessary diversity in comparison to the food consumption distribution from other research, thereby contributing to a less refined point estimate (Table 2). A striking similarity can be seen between the consumption ranges of condiments in China and the Netherlands, hovering between 25 grams to approximately 250 grams within the 50th and 99th percentile of the intake distribution (Table 2). According to the Dutch National Food Consumption Surveys (DNFCS) (https://www.rivm.nl/ publicaties/diet-of-dutch-results-of-dutch-nationalfood-consumption-survey-2012-2016), individual food product consumption is measured per eating occasion at the gram level, which allows for a higher degree of differentiation within the food intake distribution (4). Conversely, the Chinese National Nutrition and Health Survey of 2002 utilizes a different measurement scale in liang, resulting in steps of 25 or 50 grams in quantifying food consumption in their survey (2, personal communication Prof. Wu). Consequently, the intake quantity for the P50 to P65 range in the food distribution is the same at 25 grams, with all P-values from P75–P90 measured at 50 grams. This hinders the sensitivity analysis from effectively differentiating between the percentile ranges P50–P65 and P75–P90. Therefore, a food intake distribution with greater differentiation and detail in the consumed amounts might allow for a more highly tuned intake distribution for a food group. Consequently, it may lead to a different optimal point estimate than the one uncovered in Sun et al.’s study (2). The implications of this research might be further explored through a comprehensive analysis of detailed food consumption data from China. 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Abstract

The need for region-specific food intake values to accurately estimate food allergen risk is underscored by the recent Ad Hoc Joint Food and Agriculture Organization/World Health Organization (FAO/ WHO) Expert Consultation on Risk Assessment of Food Allergens (1). A recent study published by Sun et al. in China CDC Weekly 2022, titled A ChineseSpecific Reference Amounts Study with TNO Food Allergen Risk Assessment Models — China, 2022, critically examines and applies a previously established sensitivity analysis aimed at deriving food intake values for food allergen risk assessment (RA) (2–3). In their examination of Chinese food consumption data, the authors find that “the 95th–99th percentiles of the food consumption distribution per eating occasion for condiments and chocolates are the optimal point estimates for use in deterministic allergen RA, aiming to protect 99% of allergic individuals from allergic reactions due to unintended peanut presence.” This finding significantly deviates from those of Blom et al., which suggested that the 50th–75th percentiles of the food consumption distribution per eating occasion in various global contexts would suffice for achieving a similar safety objective aimed at protecting 95%–99% of allergic individuals from objective allergic reactions due to unintended allergen presence (3–4). While a more cautious approach to consumption estimations may appear safe from a risk management perspective, such an approach could involve a degree of overprotection that may result in unwarranted restrictions for both the Chinese food-allergic population and the food industry. Achieving a balance between guaranteeing safety and implementing realistic, pragmatic protocols is vital (1). Thus, a risk assessment that incorporates unnecessary high-intake figures may not provide risk managers with the most effective information(5). Hence, we evaluated the potential causes of the elevated P-values discovered in the study by Sun et al. (2). We focused on identifying elements that could significantly augment the sensitivity analysis, ultimately leading to the establishment of a more robust food intake estimation for China. Several factors in the data utilized by Sun et al. (2) could be contributing to the observed elevated P-values (Table 1), thus likely resulting in an excessively conservative outcome, more so than what was projected when the sensitivity analysis method was initially applied. For instance, the food consumption distribution employed in the study lacks the necessary diversity in comparison to the food consumption distribution from other research, thereby contributing to a less refined point estimate (Table 2). A striking similarity can be seen between the consumption ranges of condiments in China and the Netherlands, hovering between 25 grams to approximately 250 grams within the 50th and 99th percentile of the intake distribution (Table 2). According to the Dutch National Food Consumption Surveys (DNFCS) (https://www.rivm.nl/ publicaties/diet-of-dutch-results-of-dutch-nationalfood-consumption-survey-2012-2016), individual food product consumption is measured per eating occasion at the gram level, which allows for a higher degree of differentiation within the food intake distribution (4). Conversely, the Chinese National Nutrition and Health Survey of 2002 utilizes a different measurement scale in liang, resulting in steps of 25 or 50 grams in quantifying food consumption in their survey (2, personal communication Prof. Wu). Consequently, the intake quantity for the P50 to P65 range in the food distribution is the same at 25 grams, with all P-values from P75–P90 measured at 50 grams. This hinders the sensitivity analysis from effectively differentiating between the percentile ranges P50–P65 and P75–P90. Therefore, a food intake distribution with greater differentiation and detail in the consumed amounts might allow for a more highly tuned intake distribution for a food group. Consequently, it may lead to a different optimal point estimate than the one uncovered in Sun et al.’s study (2). The implications of this research might be further explored through a comprehensive analysis of detailed food consumption data from China. In the absence of such records, comparable information from alternative China CDC Weekly
Sun et al.(2022)对中国特定参考量研究的回顾。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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