Hamid Ahmadpourmir, Seyedeh Faezeh Taghizadeh, Konstantinos Tsarouhas, Fatemeh Rakhshani, Vida Ebrahimi, Aristidis Tsatsakis, Christina Tsitsimpikou, Mahmoud Hashemzaei, Ramin Rezaee
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Early-Life Dietary Exposure to Perfluorooctanoic Acid (PFOA) Through Milk Consumption: A Systematic Review.
Perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) has raised public concern due to its widespread presence/use and toxic health effects including hepatotoxicity, neurotoxicity, and developmental toxicity. Because dietary intake is a major route of PFOA exposure, and milk is a primary source of nutrition in early life, the present systematic review discusses PFOA occurrence in milk samples and the employed determination methods. In the present article, 69 studies (published 2007-2024) reporting PFOA levels in infant formula, commercial milk, and human breast milk were included. The highest concentration of PFOA in infant formula and commercial milk was reported from Spain (2490 ng/kg) and the highest level of PFOA in breast milk from Belgium (3.5 ng/mL). The most commonly used approaches for extraction and analysis of PFOA were solid-phase extraction and LC-MS/MS, respectively. The evidence indicates the need for constant monitoring of PFOA levels in milk samples to safeguard vulnerable populations, especially neonates, infants, and children.
期刊介绍:
Journal of Applied Toxicology publishes peer-reviewed original reviews and hypothesis-driven research articles on mechanistic, fundamental and applied research relating to the toxicity of drugs and chemicals at the molecular, cellular, tissue, target organ and whole body level in vivo (by all relevant routes of exposure) and in vitro / ex vivo. All aspects of toxicology are covered (including but not limited to nanotoxicology, genomics and proteomics, teratogenesis, carcinogenesis, mutagenesis, reproductive and endocrine toxicology, toxicopathology, target organ toxicity, systems toxicity (eg immunotoxicity), neurobehavioral toxicology, mechanistic studies, biochemical and molecular toxicology, novel biomarkers, pharmacokinetics/PBPK, risk assessment and environmental health studies) and emphasis is given to papers of clear application to human health, and/or advance mechanistic understanding and/or provide significant contributions and impact to their field.