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Mycotoxins in the human food chain

Mycotoxins in the human food chain: what risks for the consumer?

Published: December 20, 2006
By: F. GALVANO, A. RITIENI, A. DE LORENZO, G. PIVA, and A. PIETRI - Mediterranean University of Reggio Calabria/Federico II University/University of Tor Vergata/Catholic University of the Sacred Heart (Courtesy of Alltech Inc.)
Introduction

Mycotoxins are highly undesired substances that should not be present in food and for which a zero tolerance is ideal. However, even the best agricultural, storage and processing practices cannot completely avoid or eliminate these contaminants, and thus it is impossible to achieve a truly mycotoxin-free food chain. Despite low consumer awareness of the problem, health risk related to mycotoxin ingestion has been quantified as exceeding risk from other food-related contaminants such as pesticides, additives, heavy metals, and microbial agents. For this reason mycotoxins have been called the ‘hidden killers’.

Mycotoxins can easily enter the human food chain directly via plant products (e.g., cereal grains, oilseeds, nuts, coffee, cocoa), fruits and their juices, beverages (wine and beer), spices and, indirectly, via foods obtained from animals given diets contaminated with mycotoxins that can leave residues in milk and its derivatives, and, especially, in fresh and cured pork. A review of the occurrence of mycotoxins in the most important human foods and the associated risks is the objective of this paper.


Human breast milk

Humans who ingest mycotoxin-contaminated foods eliminate variable amounts of the toxin in bodily fluids or accumulate them in tissues. For this reason, contamination of human breast milk presents a potentially serious health hazard. The occurrence of aflatoxin in human tissues or fluids is a problem, particularly in tropical or subtropical countries. Aflatoxin M1 (AFM1) has been detected in breast milk, cord blood, and maternal blood in African countries (Sudan, Ghana, Kenya, Nigeria, Sudan, Gambia), in the Guangxi region of China, (see review by Galvano et al., 1996), in the United Arab Emirates (Abdulrazzaq et al., 2003), and in Australia and Thailand (el Nezami et al., 1995). Aflatoxin contamination also poses a serious prenatal health hazard because it can cross the human placental membrane and may be concentrated by the developing fetoplacental unit. Although the interaction between dietary aflatoxin intake and exposure of mother, fetus, and newborn infant is very complex, depending on the physiological status of the mother and on food composition, the presence of aflatoxin B1 (AFB1)and its metabolites in human blood and breast milk presents a serious health hazard.

Just as AFB1 is a concern in tropical or subtropical countries, conversely ochratoxin A (OTA) residues in human milk are common in countries in the temperate and cold areas of the northern hemisphere, such as Italy (Micco et al., 1991; 1995; Miraglia et al., 1995), Switzerland (Zimmerli and Dick, 1995), Sweden (Breitholtz-Emanuelsson et al., 1993), and Germany (Gareis et al., 1988). Nevertheless, Jonsyn and coworkers (1995) reported that, due to the high OTA levels in human milk, infants in Sierra Leone are exposed to OTA and AFB1 levels that in some cases far exceed those permissible in animal feed in developed countries.

In Norway, Skaug and co-workers (1998, 2001) examined the relationship between OTA contamination of human milk and dietary intake, finding that the risk of OTA contamination was related to dietary intake of breakfast cereals, processed meat products, cheese, liver pate, cakes, cookies and juice. Because in the first months of life infants may be fed concurrently breast and dried milk sources, they are at risk for ingesting multiple mycotoxins (e.g., OTA plus AFM1).


Animal-derived foods

MILK AND MILK PRODUCTS


The occurrence of mycotoxins in milk and its derivatives is a serious problem of food hygiene, as milk is a primary source of human nutrition, particularly for infants and children, who are potentially more sensitive to toxins and whose diet is much less varied than that of adults.

Major concerns about milk contamination by mycotoxins are largely limited to AFB1 and OTA.

Mammals who ingest AFB1-contaminated diets eliminate into milk amounts of the main hepatic 4-hydroxylated metabolite known as ‘milk toxin’ or aflatoxin M1 (AFM1). Aflatoxin M1 is usually considered to be a detoxification product of AFB1 as its toxicity is about one order of magnitude less than that of AFB1; however, the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC, 1993) classifies AFM1 as a possible human carcinogen.

OTA transfer to milk has been demonstrated in rats and humans. Dietary OTA can also result in residues in cow’s milk but at substantially lower levels except when massive doses are ingested. Indeed, OTA is largely transformed by the rumen microflora into ochratoxin-α. However, Skaug (1999) found that OTA levels in milk from cows in Norway were sufficient to cause a higher intake of OTA than the suggested tolerable daily intake (TDI) of 5 ng/kg BW/day (e.g. in small children who consume large quantities of milk).

According to Stoloff (1980), milk has the greatest demonstrated potential for introducing aflatoxin residues from edible animal tissues into the human diet. Research on AFM1 contamination of milk and milk products is copious and surely a greater body of information on this toxin exists than on any other (for extensive reviews see Fremy and Dragacci, 1999; Galvano et al., 1996).

In the last decade, the incidence of AFM1 contamination seems to have been reduced both by increasing the accuracy of detection procedures and through stricter regulatory limits (mainly in the EU) for AFB1 in feeds and AFM1 in milk. The incidence of AFM1 contamination is often higher in commercial milk than in raw farm milk, because of the pollution of uncontaminated bulk milk by a few contaminated samples. For the same reason, high AFM1 contamination levels in commercial milk seldom occurs. Nevertheless, the occurrence of AFM1 in cow’s milk and milk products is widespread, even if contamination levels do not seem to be a serious health hazard according to the current scientific fund of knowledge. The above considerations have been confirmed by recent surveys conducted in many countries (Carvajal et al., 2003a,b; Garrido et al., 2003; Roussi et al., 2002; Sivrastava et al., 2001; Oruc and Sonal, 2001; Galvano et al., 1998, 2001; Pietri et al., 2003). Since AFM1 may or may not be present in dairy products in a particular year depending on the weather conditions, wide and frequent monitoring programs using accurate and reliable analytical techniques remain the primary strategy to provide safe milk for consumers.

When dairy products are manufactured from milk contaminated with AFM1, the toxin is transmitted to the resulting products. AFM1 is stable in raw milk and processed milk products and is generally unaffected by pasteurization or processing into cheese, yogurt, cream and butter (Wood, 1991; Galvano et al., 1996). AFM1 combines with casein during the formation of cheese, resulting in higher concentrations of the toxin than are found in the whey. Concentrations exceed source milk levels by 2.5- to 3.3-fold in many soft cheeses and 3.9- to 5.8-fold in hard cheeses (Yousef and Marth, 1989).

Cheese can also be directly contaminated by toxins produced by undesired and/or intentionally added mycoflora that develop during ripening. However, the toxicological relevance of directly contaminated cheeses is still unknown.

Milk powder for infant formula is another route of exposure to AFM1. Galvano and co-workers (1996) reviewed the literature from 1980 to 1995. Although very little data are available in the scientific literature, authors concluded that the incidence and contamination level of AFM1 in dried milk and infant formulae should not have been a health hazard, and that, since infants are more vulnerable and sensitive than adults, monitoring of infant foods should be repeated more frequently and extensively. Since 1995 only six surveys have been conducted, two in Italy (Galvano et al., 1998; 2001) and one in Brazil, (Oliveira et al., 1997), Korea (Kim et al., 2000), Turkey (Aksit et al., 1997) and India (Rastogi et al., 2004). Consistent with data on liquid milk, overall low levels of contamination were reported with the exception of the study in India in which all samples exceeded the Commission of the European Community (EC) limit (50 ng/L). However, Aksit et al. (1997) correctly concluded that, although aflatoxin concentrations in the formulae were found to be within acceptable limits for most countries, its existence must be carefully evaluated, because the future effects of very small amounts of aflatoxin on growing organisms are unknown.


MEAT AND MEAT PRODUCTS

Meat and meat products from animals given mycotoxin contaminated feeds are a potential route of human exposure. However, meat from ruminant animals can be almost excluded as an important route of exposure for humans due to the degrading/converting action of rumen microflora that drastically reduces the carry-over to tissues. Among meats from non-ruminant animals pork is the most susceptible to mycotoxin contamination, specifically to OTA. Indeed, OTA can easily be transferred to pork due to its high incidence in pig feeds and the unfavorable elimination toxicokinetics that lead to a relatively long half-life in edible animal tissues.

OTA contamination of pork is a potential concern particularly in northern European countries and elsewhere where climatic conditions lead to a high incidence of OTA contamination in pig feeds. In Denmark, the implementation of post-mortem inspection programs has been an effective precautionary practice (Mousing et al., 1997); a level of 15 ppb of OTA in a pig liver or kidney results in its confiscation, and levels exceeding 25 ppb result in confiscation of the entire carcass. Surveys performed on pig meat in Denmark (Jorgensen and Petersen, 2002; Jorgensen, 1998) and Romania (Curtui et al., 2001), on sausages in Germany (Frank, 1991), on ham in Italy (Chiavaro et al., 2002), on pig liver in France (Dragacci et al., 1999) and on liver pates in Spain (Jimenez et al., 2001), reported the detection of acceptably low levels of OTA.

An evaluation of the sources of OTA intake in France demonstrated that the contribution of meat would be only ~3% of the total OTA intake (Verger et al., 1999).

Although pork meat is a route for human exposure to OTA and continuous surveillance is needed, its contribution is proportionately much less significant than that of some other foods.


EGGS

Mycotoxin residues in eggs have the potential to pose a significant human health hazard. Few studies are available on the carryover into eggs of mycotoxins other than AFB1, however residues of this toxin in eggs could potentially constitute an important human health hazard.

Aflatoxin B1 biotransformation in the liver of hens generates a variety of toxic hydroxylated metabolites that can also be transferred to eggs (Micco et al., 1987).

Widely variable (from 250:1 to 66200:1) transmission ratios (AFB1 in feed:AFB1 residual) for eggs have been reported in the literature (Galvano et al., 2005). In order to prevent high concentrations of AFB1 in eggs, since 1974, the EC has set a limit for AFB1 of 20 μg/kg for layer feed. A recent study (Pietri et al., 2001) indicated that if the official limit is respected, no trace of AFB1 or metabolites can be found in eggs. AFB1 residues detectable only in the low parts per trillion range can be found when the corresponding level in the feed is about 100 μg/kg. In examining these data and previously published information, it can be said that in Europe egg contribution to overall AFB1 intake is negligible.


Cereals for human use

Cereal grains and related by-products have a unique importance among food commodities because they are consumed by millions of people and are considered, from a nutritional point of view, the primary source of carbohydrates for humans, breeder animals, and farm livestock. Thus, microbiological, chemical, and mycotoxicological safety of cereals are considered very important for both the human and animal food chains.

Cereals are easily colonized by phytopathogenic moulds, which find excellent growth conditions in the field and during storage after harvest. The severe toxicities caused by moulds in animal and human tissues and organs are well known and cereals are a major route of introduction to the human food chain. Fungi belonging to the Fusarium, Penicillium, Alternaria and Aspergillus genera are involved in mycotoxin accumulation, whereas other genera such as Acremonium, Phomopsis, and Pithomyces are considered ancillary.

Important studies of fungi occurrence and mycotoxin production are available (e.g., D’Mello et al., 1997; Panigrahi, 1997; Smith, 1997). A great deal of attention has been given to aflatoxin producers such as A. flavus and A. parasiticus, because AFB1 is considered by the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) to be the most carcinogenic compound produced by non-human activities. Consequently, many countries have legislated minimum levels for aflatoxins in foods, and worldwide regulations are in place for selected foods (Smith et al., 1997). The worldwide occurrence of aflatoxins in cereals is well documented, with the major contamination occurring in countries with high temperature and humidity. Corn is the most frequently contaminated cereal, whereas sorghum, rice, barley and wheat are less susceptible. Except for seasonal elevations in the contamination of corn, aflatoxin contamination of cereals rarely is a concern per se, although its frequent co-occurrence with combinations of other mycotoxins can cause serious problems. Recently Park and coworkers (2004) reported that rice is the major contributor to the dietary intake of AFB1 in Korea and calculated that the probable daily intake of AFB1 for Koreans exceeds the estimated provisional maximum tolerable daily intake.

Toxins produced by Fusarium fungi growing on cereals represent a serious concern, especially in temperate climates (Placinta et al., 1999). The most important and largest family of fusariotoxins are the trichothecenes, which consists of several compounds divided into four subgroups. Types A and B represent the most important members (D’Mello, 1997). Type A trichothecenes include T-2 toxin, HT-2 toxin, neosolaniol (NEO) and diacetoxyscirpenol (DAS), while type B trichothecenes include deoxynivalenol (DON or vomitoxin) and its 3-acetyl and 15-acetyl derivatives (3-ADON and 15-ADON, respectively), nivalenol (NIV) and fusarenon-X. The chemical structures of trichothecenes are related to Fusarium species, which permits chemotaxonomic identifications. Type A trichothecenes predominate in F. sporotrichioides and F. poae, whereas type B trichothecenes occur mainly in F. culmorum and F. graminearum. Cereal safety is directly related to trichothecene occurrence (Scott, 1989; Yoshizawa, 1991). Many outbreaks of acute human disease involving nausea, vomiting, gastrointestinal upset, dizziness, diarrhoea, and headache have been reported in Asia, which have been attributed to consumption of cereals contaminated with Fusarium species and, more recently, to the presence of DON at concentrations of 3,000 to 93,000 μg/kg of grain.

Occasionally, other trichothecenes were reported present as well, but at much lower incidence and concentration (WHO, 2002). As shown in Table 1, trichothecene occurrence in cereals, especially in corn, is a worldwide problem, both for highly industrialized countries such as Canada, Japan, the United States, Germany, and Norway and for developing countries such as South Africa, India, Vietnam.

Zearalenone is an important oestrogenic toxin that often co-contaminates cereals along with trichothecenes and moniliformin. Moniliformin is also synthesised by F. oxysporum, which in addition is a recognised source of the mycotoxins wortmannin and fusaric acid (D’Mello et al., 1997). The diversity of Fusarium mycotoxins is further illustrated by the production of fusarochromanones (TDP-1, TDP-2, and TDP-6) by F. equiseti, which synthesises several trichothecenes as well as zearalenone (Flannigan, 1991; D’Mello et al., 1997). Extensive data on global contamination of cereal grains indicate that Fusarium mycotoxins are not a secondary risk for consumer health (Muller and Schwadorf, 1993; Chulze et al., 1996; Viquez et al., 1996).

Since 1988, fumonisins, a novel mycotoxin family, have been the focus of surveillance by mycotoxicologists and chemists (Gelderblom et al., 1988; Marasas, 1995).

Fumonisins are mycotoxins produced by the fungus Fusarium moniliforme, which occurs naturally on corn. Fumonisins are structurally diverse compared with hundreds of other known mycotoxins; and in fact are very polar substances containing both amino and carboxylic groups. Table 2 provides surveillance data on fumonisin levels reported in selected countries.


VARIOUS CORN-BASED FOODS

Fumonisin B1 (FB1) is the most common fumonisin.
High health risk stems from corn simultaneously contaminated with FB1 and combinations of other mycotoxins, as reported in China (along with AFB1, Wang et al., 1995b), Vietnam (with DON, NIV and AFB1, Wang et al., 1995a), Indonesia (with AFB1, DON, NIV and ZEN, Ali et al., 1998), Korea (with DON, NIV, other trichothecenes and ZEN, Sohn et al., 1999; with aflatoxins and OTA, Park et al., 2002), Brazil (with aflatoxins and ZEN, Vargas et al., 2001; with aflatoxins, Ono et al., 2001;), Ghana (with aflatoxins, Kpodo et al., 2000), USA (with moniliformin, Gutema et al., 2000), Thailand (with aflatoxins, Yoshizawa et al., 1996) and southeast Asia (with aflatoxins, ZEN and nivalenol, Yamashita et al., 1995).

Recently, Cirillo and co-workers (2003a) reported frequencies and levels of contamination of DON and FB1 and FB2 in cereal-based foods in the Italian marketplace. In particular, of 202 samples investigated, including raw materials and processed cereal foods (bread, pasta, breakfast cereals, biscuits, baby and infant foods), 84% were contaminated with DON at levels between 7 and 930 μg/kg (median 65 μg/kg), 26% contained FB1 ranging from 10 to 2870 μg/kg (70 μg/ kg), and 35% contained FB2 at 10-790 μg/kg (80 μg/ kg). The highest levels of DON and FB1 were detected in raw cereals and wholemeal flours. The highest levels of FB2 were detected in durum wheat pasta. A widespread DON contamination was found in baby and infant foods at levels varying from 7 to 166 μg/kg.

Pietri and co-workers (2004), surveying corn grain produced in Italy over the period 1995 to 1999, found that FB1 was by far the most significant mycotoxin in this product. The average level was 3064 μg/kg; with 69.6% of samples containing over 1000 μg/kg, and 16.9% over 5000 μg/kg. Other studies have reported fumonisin occurrence in Italy, Portugal, and African countries (Doko et al., 1995). In Italy co-contamination of FB1 was observed with cyclodepsipeptides or sesterterpenes such as beauvericin or fusaproliferin (Ritieni et al., 1997).


Table 1. Selected data on worldwide trichothecenes and zearalenone contamination of cereals (μg/kg).

Mycotoxins in the human food chain: what risks for the consumer? - Image 1
Mean value


Table 2. Selected data on worldwide fumonisin contamination of corn (μg/kg).

Mycotoxins in the human food chain: what risks for the consumer? - Image 2
Mean value. nd: not detectable


Wine and beer

The occurrence of OTA in wine was demonstrated for the first time by Zimmerli and Dick (1996) in a survey on 133 wines obtained from retail outlets in Switzerland.

The authors observed a higher OTA concentration in red wines than in white and rosé wines, thus deducing that the amount of OTA was dependent on the latitude of the production region: the further south the origin, the more frequent the occurrence and the greater the concentration. After the first detection of OTA in wine, several surveys were conducted, mainly in Europe (see Galvano et al., 2005 for extensive review). A clear geographic effect on OTA occurrence in red wines was demonstrated in Germany by Otteneder and Majerus (2000), in Italy by Pietri and co-workers (2001) and in Greece (Stefanaki et al., 2003). A general trend toward increasing OTA contamination for red wines from northern to southern latitudes was observed. Some of the above-mentioned authors noted that in general, lowcost red table wines had significantly higher OTA concentrations compared with good quality bottled wines. Generally, red wines are more contaminated than white wines due to differences in the wine-making process.

Obviously, OTA can contaminate not only wine, but also other grape products. Dried vine fruit (currants, raisins and sultanas) can be highly contaminated, thus can be an important dietary source of OTA for people (e.g., children) who have high levels of consumption.

Due to this, the Commission of the European Communities (2002) fixed an OTA limit of 10 μg/kg in dried vine fruits.

Unlike wine, which is almost exclusively contaminated by OTA, beer can be contaminated by a number of mycotoxins. Indeed, barley as well as other cereals (e.g. corn, wheat and sorghum) employed for producing beer, is a good substrate for the growth of many toxigenic fungi. Consequently, beer can be contaminated by all of the major mycotoxins except perhaps by citrinin, which does not seem to survive the mashing step. Data on the occurrence of mycotoxins in beer were recently reviewed by Galvano and co-workers (2005). The authors concluded that, for many reasons, beer contamination is worldwide, however due to differences in analytical procedures it is very difficult to compare the data. Nevertheless, with few exceptions, overall reported contamination levels are low.

A number of factors are responsible for the great variability in the types and amounts of mycotoxin contaminants in beer. Climatic conditions and cereal sources are the most decisive factors that can selectively favor the growth of a particular mould. These factors also explain the clear geographical patterns. The importance of other factors, such as storage and pretreatment of cereal source and brewery procedures, are yet to be fully understood. In addition, the possible co-occurrence of mycotoxins in beer is an issue that remains to be investigated. In some geographic areas, beer is a significant dietary component and must be considered in estimating the probable daily intake of mycotoxins other than OTA.


Fruits and fruit juices

Fruits and vegetables are another important part of a balanced human diet, but they may be colonised by moulds that produce mycotoxins (Drusch and Ragab, 2003). A common mycotoxin in apple juice and to a lesser extent in grape juice is citrinin, produced by Penicillium expansum (Vinas et al., 1993). In addition, OTA biosynthesized by Aspergillus carbonarius is a significant risk for apple and grape juice (Pitt, 2000).

Patulin is considered the most dangerous mycotoxin in fruit juices, and is produced by several fungal species such as B. fulva, B. nivea and P. expansum, which are the major patulin-producing microorganisms (Frisvad and Thrane, 1996). Patulin is partially destroyed by the fermentation process during cider production (Ough and Corison, 1980; Stinson et al., 1978). Patulin has been widely studied in fruit juices (Mortimer et al., 1985; Larsen et al., 1998; de Sylos and Rodriguez-Amaya, 1999), particularly in apple juice (Scott et al., 1972; Mortimer et al., 1985; de Sylos and Rodriguez-Amaya, 1999; Beretta et al., 2000). More recently, patulin and chaetoglobosin surveys were conducted by Ritieni (2003) and Andersen and co-workers (2004). Patulin occurrence in fruit juices is related to several factors such as temperature and water activity (Northolt et al., 1996) or technological treatments during transformation (Jackson et al., 2003). In addition, agronomic practices in fruit cultivation and juice making have a great influence on the occurrence of both patulin and citrinin (e.g., in Portuguese apples; Martins et al., 2002). Many research groups have recommended that apple products for human consumption should not contain residual patulin levels in excess of 50 μg/L.

Bananas can be contaminated by mycotoxins produced by the Fusarium species. In fact, bananas can be invaded after harvest by various fungal species that produce ‘crown rot’ (Ogundero 1987). F. moniliforme isolates have been found to produce potentially three 12,13- epoxytrichothecene mycotoxins (trichothecolone, diacetoxyscirpenol (DAS), and T-2 toxin), the palmitoyl esters of trichothecolone, scirpenetriol, and T-2 tetraol (T-2 TOL), and free and palmitic acid-conjugated zearalenone (Chakrabarti et al., 1986). Finally, Shenasi and co-workers examined 25 varieties of dates (Phoenix dactylifera) at different maturation stages for aflatoxins and aflatoxigenic Aspergillus spp. The samples were examined as fresh fruit and under simulated storage conditions of high humidity. Aflatoxins were detected in 12% of the samples and aflatoxigenic Aspergilli were detected in 40% of the varieties examined (Shenasi et al., 2002).


Coffee and cocoa products

Coffee can contain OTA produced by Aspergillus ochraceus or A. carbonarius. Studies in Brazil have shown that mould growth and OTA production occur only during drying of green coffee beans, and that if drying is rapid and effective, OTA will not be produced.

OTA has been found in green coffee for several years, but there has been and still is some uncertainty as to what extent OTA is degraded during the roasting process and further transmitted from roasted coffee to the final coffee brew. The reported reductions caused by roasting vary, but the major source of variation was a low OTA level (generally less than 10 μg/kg) in green coffee submitted to the process. Reports usually showed high rates of OTA reduction, ranging between 30 and 90%. Decaffeination seems to be an effective process, resulting in 92% reduction of OTA. During freeze-dried coffee manufacture or brewing, nearly 80% of OTA initially present in roasted and ground coffee was found to be transferred to the cup (van der Stegen et al., 2001).

Many surveys of roasted coffee demonstrated that OTA incidence is generally low and that levels exceeding 5 μg/kg are very rare. Recent data obtained in Germany, the UK, and Switzerland seem to indicate that coffee on the European market is contaminated with a mean OTA level of around 0.8 μg OTA/kg. On the basis of available contamination rates and mean consumption of food categories, it was calculated that coffee contributed an average of 2 to 3 ng/kg, while cereals and wine contributed about 25 and 10 ng/kg BW per week, respectively (WHO, 2001).

Cocoa beans are the source of cocoa powder, which is a frequent ingredient in several kinds of foods, cakes, biscuits, children’s foods, ice creams, and sweets. The agronomic and storage conditions associated with cocoa beans are favourable for mould growth, mainly Penicillium spp., and consequently OTA biosynthesis is not unexpected. An initial study on OTA in cocoa found that it was present at detectable levels in 67% of analysed samples. There was no correlation between OTA and visible mould on the beans, or geographic source of the beans. OTA was found at lower levels in cocoa butter than in the non-fat fraction (powder or cake) (Beckett, 1994). In 1998, a survey was conducted to assess the exposure of UK consumers to OTA in cocoa powder and chocolate (http://www.britanniafood.com). The OTA contamination in chocolate bars and cocoa powder was generally low, although OTA was detected in all 20 samples of cocoa powder analysed and three out of four chocolate bars. Considering chocolate samples, 75% of samples were positive for OTA, but at low levels. It was concluded that there is little cause of concern about the level of OTA in cocoa and chocolate.


Spices

Spices are other foods that have the potential to be highly contaminated, especially by AFB1. However, their toxicological importance is generally considered to be low relative to their quantitative inclusion in the diet.


Suspected human mycotoxicosis

Diseases caused by mycotoxins are called mycotoxicoses and can be acute, chronic, or subchronic. Acute cases of mycotoxicosis are rare and limited to developing countries. Conversely, long-term exposure to low levels of mycotoxins is an insidious, widespread problem that scientists are called to address worldwide. Indeed, chronic mycotoxicoses are difficult to recognize, as epidemiological evidence is difficult to demonstrate due to the involvement of multiple epidemiological factors and uncertainties in assessing exposure. Although sufficient evidence of the involvement of mycotoxins as etiological agents of human diseases arises from both laboratory and epidemiological studies, caution is needed when blaming mycotoxins for human disease because the literature is inconclusive in establishing direct and unequivocal causal relationships.

The first historically recorded case of human mycotoxicosis was ergotism, also known as St. Anthony’s Fire, caused by the ingestion of grains contaminated by sclerotia of Claviceps purpurea. After periodic outbreaks, the disease became epidemic in central Europe during the Middle Ages. Nowadays risk of ergotism seems to be limited to animals. The last reported cases in humans occurred in the 1970s.

Tricothecenes are suspected to be responsible for two diseases: alimentary toxic aleukia and Kashin Beck disease; and citreoviridin ingestion has been linked with cardiac beriberi. Two recent epidemiological suspicions of mycotoxin involvement in a human disease have also been reported. The first involves OTA in the etiology of testicular cancer, as hypothesized by Schwartz (2002).

The second involves fumonisins as a causative agent in human neural tube defects. Marasas and co-workers (2004) proposed that fumonisins affect folate utilisation thus making them potential risk factors for birth defects arising from neural crest cells.

Sufficient epidemiological data support the theory that three mycotoxins are strongly suspected or directly involved in the etiology of specific human diseases with high regional incidence. These are OTA associated with human nephropathies, aflatoxin B1 for hepatocarcinoma, and fumonisins for esophageal cancer, as summarized below.


OCHRATOXIN AND NEPHROPATHY

OTA is suspected to be involved in the etiology of human nephropathies and tumors of urinary organs. The persistence of OTA in the human body is prolonged as it has a blood half-life of 35 days after a single oral dosage, due to unfavorable elimination toxicokinetics (Studer-Rohr et al., 2000). The long half-life of OTA, together with frequent exposure of humans by ingestion of OTA-contaminated food, results in a high frequency of OTA in human blood samples collected around the world (Speijers and van Egmond, 1993; WHO, 2001).

OTA is neither stored nor deposited in the body, but numerous laboratory and animal studies clearly demonstrate that it is distributed via the blood mainly to the kidneys (Hult and Fuchs, 1986). In several mammalian species, even at low doses, OTA is nephrotoxic, which is likely to hold true in humans.

Despite the numerous epidemiological studies performed, the causality of OTA exposure with human nephropathies has never been proven (WHO, 2001).

The usual investigative approach is to analyse OTA in foods and in biological fluids (mainly plasma) of a healthy population and/or restricted groups of patients suffering from nephropathies. Many studies conclude a possible involvement of OTA in the etiology of a fatal human disease referred to as Balkan Endemic Nephropathy (BEN), which is found in some regions of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Serbia, and Romania (Petkova-Bocharova et al., 2002). First in Bulgaria, and afterwards in other countries where BEN is present, an unusually high incidence of urinary tract tumors was noted (Ceovic et al., 1992; Pfohl- Leszkowicz et al., 2002). Several epidemiological studies have been conducted in countries in northern Africa, such as Egypt (Wafa et al., 1998), Algeria (Khalef et al., 1993), Morocco (Filali et al., 2002) and, particularly, Tunisia (Eko-Ebongue, 1994; Maarou et al., 1995a,b) to establish a causal relationship between OTA and a human nephropathy similar to BEN, and tentatively called chronic interstitial nephropathy (CIN).

Two contradictory studies from Tunisian researchers (Abid et al., 2003; Grosso et al., 2003) have been published, showing that causal uncertainty still exists.

Data collected by Abid et al. (2003) over the period 1991–2000 on a quite large number of volunteers, supported OTA involvement in the Tunisian CIN. Additional supporting evidence came from the detection of significant levels of OTA in plasma of human groups living in conditions similar to those in the Balkans and consuming OTA-contaminated foods. However Grosso and co-workers (2003) came to the opposite conclusion by observing OTA levels in sera from volunteers hospitalized for kidney damage that were not very high.

Recently, Hassen and co-workers (2004) found that high blood OTA and β(2)-microglobulinuria levels seem strongly associated with CIN, thus supporting OTA involvement in the outcome of CIN and underlining the importance of β(2)-microglobulinuria in the characterisation of this disease. According to Abouzied and co-workers (2002), OTA alone could not induce BEN, but it could act synergistically with other environmental toxins. A new approach, based on the duplicate-diet method, was reported by Vrabcheva and co-workers (2004). In the attempt to confirm the exposure of a population to OTA in the Vratza district in Bulgaria, these researchers followed the frequency of consumption of OTA-contaminated food by selected families in the BEN area and the OTA intake level over a one-month period. Results correlated the extremely high OTA exposure of the population from this BEN area, and implicated its involvement in this disease.

Despite intensive research at both epidemiological and experimental/mechanistic levels, it is still an open question as to whether OTA plays a causative or subordinate role in the induction of human nephropathies worldwide. Differences related to: 1) detection limit and overall analytical reliability of OTA measurement in biological fluids, and 2) qualitative (e.g., kind and severity of nephropathy) and quantitative sampling of the population as well as of foods, likely make results not easily comparable. Seasonal variations of OTA in foods and consequently in sera should be also considered, as demonstrated by Peraica and co-workers (2001) in a survey of a Croatian population. Finally, but equally important, it will be necessary to test possible synergistic effects of mycotoxins (e.g., citrinin) simultaneously present with OTA in foods. For example, in a study by Vrabcheva and co-workers (2000) levels of citrinin were detected up to 200-fold higher than OTA in cereals from Bulgarian villages with a history of Balkan endemic nephropathy.


AFLATOXIN AND HEPATOCELLULAR CARCINOMA

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is one of the most widespread malignancies. It has the fourth highest mortality rate worldwide and is estimated to cause approximately half a million deaths annually. Geographic areas of interest include Asia, southern China, and sub- Saharan Africa. An increasing incidence of HCC has also recently been observed in the United States (el Serag and Mason, 1999). Chronic hepatitis B or C infections, exposure to dietary AFB1 and alcoholic cirrhosis have been demonstrated to be, in order of importance, the major risk factors in the multifactorial etiology of HCC.

Early epidemiological studies conducted in areas with high HCC incidence basically investigated the possible correlation between AFB1 dietary exposure and the occurrence of HCC. The involvement of other factors, such as hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection, was verified only in successive studies. Recently, the possibility of a synergistic carcinogenic interaction between HBV chronic infection and dietary exposure to AFB1 arose from the observation of their co-existence in countries with high incidence of HCC and was confirmed by further experimental and epidemiological studies (Kew, 2003). Sufficient data led to the conclusion that chronic hepatitis B or C infections, exposure to dietary AFB1, and alcoholic cirrhosis are, in order of importance, the major risk factors in the multifactorial etiology of HCC.

However, the carcinogenic potency of AFB1 is considered much lower in populations where chronic hepatitis infections are rare. Thus, recommendations for the control of aflatoxicosis have been proposed.


FUMONISIN AND OESOPHAGEAL CANCER

In areas where humans consume corn as the staple food, fumonisin contamination has been linked with oesophageal cancer. The usual methodological approach consists of verifying the relationship between fumonisincontaminated corn and the incidence of oesophageal cancer, often by comparing data from high and low risk areas. The countries where this relationship has been more thoroughly investigated are South Africa (especially the Transkei region) (Chelule et al., 2001; Marasas, 2001) and China (Qiu et al., 2001; Abnet et al., 2001; Chu and Li, 1994; Wang et al., 2000; Yoshizawa et al., 1994). However, the possible role of fumonisin-contaminated corn has been also investigated in other areas with high oesophageal cancer incidence such as northeastern Italy (Franceschi et al., 1995; Visconti and Doko, 1994), southern Brazil (van der Westhuizen et al., 2003), and Iran (Shephard et al., 2002). In a more recent approach investigators tried to establish a relationship between the altered ratio of sphingolipids (e.g., sphinganine:sphingosine, Sa:So ratio) and oesophageal cancer incidence. Indeed, fumonisin B1, structurally resembling sphingoid bases, is an inhibitor of ceramide synthetase, a key enzyme involved in de novo sphingolipid synthesis and in the reacylation of free sphingoid bases derived from sphingolipid turnover. This inhibitory effect leads to accumulation of free sphinganine and sphingosine and alteration of the Sa:So ratio. This ratio has been demonstrated to be an early biomarker of fumonisin exposure that is relatively easy to analyse in the urine.

Based on this finding, Qiu and co-workers (2001) found that the urinary Sa:So ratio in men in the Chinese endemic area of Henan province was significantly higher than that of the population in Suixian, a low oesophageal cancer incidence area, whereas no difference was observed in women. Diversely, Abnet and co-workers (2001) found no significant association between serum sphingolipid levels and risk of oesophageal cancer in Linxian (China).

In 1993, the IARC concluded there is ‘inadequate evidence’ for carcinogenicity in humans from oral exposure to FB1 and a role for fumonisins in any other human disease has likewise not been proven. However, the accumulated data over the last decade demonstrate that known naturally occurring levels of fumonisin present a potential threat to human health and also suggest that fumonisin can cause oesophageal cancer.

As underlined in the conclusions of the recent task force report of the US Council for Agricultural Science and Technology (CAST, 2003), additional research into the relationships between fumonisin, sphingolipid metabolism disruption, and apoptosis is necessary for understanding the potential carcinogenicity of fumonisin, and determining the relevance of these mycotoxins to human health.


Human exposure and risk assessment

The danger of mycotoxins and their pervasiveness have led public authorities to adopt strict control policies. The overall scientific approach consists of coupling exposure data of an individual or population with toxicological data. In the estimation of exposure levels the occurrence of a mycotoxin in a food and its dietary burden are taken in account. Toxicological data are obtained from laboratory studies on animals and safety/ uncertainty factors (multiples of 10) are used to extrapolate data on laboratory animals to humans and to provide an acceptable or tolerable daily intake (ADI/ TDI).

On the basis of the available toxicological data and using the five Global Environmental Monitoring System/ Food Contamination Monitoring and Assessment Programme (GEMS/Food) regional diets (WHO, 1998), the Joint Expert Committee on Food Additives (JEFCA) of the World Health Organization and of the Food and Agriculture Organization, has recently evaluated the hazard for the most significant mycotoxins (e.g., OTA, fumonisins, DON, T-2 toxin, patulin, and zearalenone) and established the Provisional Maximum Tolerable Weekly Intake (PMTWI) and the Provisional Maximum Tolerable Daily Intake (PMTDI) (JEFCA, 2001). These values are obtained by calculations subsequent to the quantification, by animal studies, of the No Observed Adverse Effect Level (NOAEL). The NOAEL is then divided for a safety/uncertainty factor of 100 (10 for extrapolation of animal data to humans and 10 for individual variation). As clearly indicated by the term ‘provisional’, the values cannot be considered definitive.

In view of the further quantification of TDI, it is necessary to establish Risk Assessment, which is the product of hazard assessment and exposure assessment. The procedure includes the following steps: 1) hazard assessment based on animal toxicity and possibly epidemiological data, 2) exposure assessment based on data concerning actual concentrations in commodities, 3) extrapolation of hazard assessment from highexposure animal data to low-exposure human data, and 4) comparison of the product of hazard assessment and exposure assessment with acceptable risk (Kuiper- Goodman, 1995). In the estimation of probable human exposure to a mycotoxin, all potentially contaminated food sources must be considered. The estimated PMTWI or PMTDI and the exposure data allow a maximum permissible limit for a specific commodity or range of foodstuffs to be established. However, due to the great worldwide variability in dietary patterns, it is difficult to harmonize limits. Indeed, a highly contaminated staple food consumed in one region requires a limit that would be too severe for the same food in an area where dietary intake of that food is low.


AFLATOXIN

A different risk assessment approach was used for genotoxic mycotoxins such as AFB1. As AFB1 has carcinogenic properties, and assuming that a no-effect concentration limit cannot be established for genotoxic compounds, any dose will have a proportional effect.

Thus, JECFA did not establish a PMTWI or PMTDI, but recommended that its level in food should be As Low As Reasonably Achievable (ALARA). In regard to AFM1, there is sufficient evidence that AFM1 is a genotoxic carcinogen, although its carcinogenic potency is estimated to be approximately 10 times lower than AFB1. Nevertheless, as milk and milk products are heavily consumed by humans, particularly by infants and young children, the risks from aflatoxin exposure need careful consideration. Thus, JEFCA assessed an estimation of dietary AFM1 intake. Highest contamination levels were found in samples from the Far Eastern region, where milk consumption is generally low. The Committee concluded that even with the worstcase assumptions, the additional risks for liver cancer predicted with use of the proposed maximum levels of AFM1 are very small, even for big milk drinkers.


OCHRATOXIN A

Data on mycotoxin exposure and/or risk assessment are available in the literature for OTA and different tolerable daily intakes (TDI) have been suggested over the last decade. In 1998, the European Commission’s Scientific Committee on Food (SCFOO, 1998) recommended that it would be prudent to minimize exposure to OTA as much as possible, e.g., to below 5 ng/kg/BW/day. A cautious TDI (5 ng/kg bw) has been also proposed by the Working Group of the Nordic Council of Ministers (Olsen et al., 1991), whereas the Canadian authority proposed a TDI in the range 1.2 to 5.7 ng/kg BW (Kuiper-Goodman, 1996). These differences in recommendations also reflect differences in risk management measures, resulting in varying legal limits applied to different commodities and to the same commodity in different countries (Walker, 2002). In any case, as pointed out by Skaug (1999), to date OTA risk assessments do not differentiate between risk to adults and children. The latter represent a particularly sensitive population that warrants a customized TDI, considering the unfavorable dose/body weight ratio.


FUMONISINS

In 2003, JEFCA established a group TDI of 2 μg/kg BW for the total of fumonisin B1, B2, and B3, alone or in combination. However, using GEMS/Food regional diets data, the fumonisin intake of people in the African region is 2.4 μg/kg BW/day based on mean levels of corn contamination. According to South African researchers at the PROMEC unit, the TDI established by JECFA is appropriate to protect consumers in the developed countries, where corn consumption is low, whereas much lower tolerance levels of 200 μg/kg would be required to protect subsistence farming communities that consume corn as a staple food in developing regions, such as Transkei (Marasas, 1997; Shephard et al., 2002). Additional uncertainties in establishing risk assessment for fumonisin depend on the great seasonal and geographic fluctuation of contamination levels. For example, when JECFA used estimates of contamination at the higher end of the scale (90th percentile), four out of five regions (Middle East, the Far East, Latin America and Africa) exceed the PMTDI, with Africa reaching an alarming 7.3 mg/kg BW per day. Experts from the Nordic countries (Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Finland, and Iceland) have conducted a preliminary evaluation of fumonisins concluding that, at that time, it was not possible to conduct a complete risk assessment. However, they recommended that the human daily intake of fumonisins should be less than 1 μg/kg BW/day (Petersen and Thorup, 2001).


DON AND FUSARIOTOXINS

The joint FAO/WHO Expert Committee on Food Additives (JECFA, 2001) established for DON a PMTDI of 1 μg/kg BW and a group PMTDI of 0.06 μg/kg BW for T-2 toxin and HT-2 toxin. However, data were only available for the European region, so that more accurate information from other parts of the world and improved analytical methods are needed. In a study conducted in the Netherlands, Pieters and co-workers (2002) derived a provisional TDI of 1.1 μg/kg BW and proposed a concentration limit of 129 μg DON/kg wheat based on this TDI and the high wheat consumption of children. The authors highlighted that in the period September 1998 through January 2000, due to high DON concentration in wheat, the dietary intake of DON exceeded the provisional TDI, especially in children, and that negative health effects could occur. In France, Leblanc and co-workers (2002) showed that consumers of high amounts of organically produced cereals can exceed the PTDI for DON over their lifetime. Very recently Schothorst and Van Egmond (2004) presented the results of the SCOOP (Scientific Co-operation on Questions relating to Food) subcommittee on trichothecenes. Despite a significant lack of consumption data in some countries and very poor information on infant and children’s foods, the authors concluded the following: 1) although among cereals, corn showed the highest level of contamination with trichothecenes, wheat and wheat-containing products (like bread and pasta) represent the major source of intake; 2) the overall mean intake for DON is below the TDI, although for young children the mean intakes are sometimes (very) close to the TDI; 3) NIV intakes are far below the TDI; and 4) T-2 and HT-2 toxin intakes are in most cases above the TDI.


Conclusions

Mycotoxins in the human food chain are an unavoidable problem that encompasses, by varying degrees, virtually all foods and all people. A basic distinction must be drawn between developing and developed countries. In the first, people are surely exposed to both acute and chronic mycotoxicosis. However, at least in the poorest developing countries where the fundamental problem is to provide a sufficient food supply, it appears unrealistic to address food safety problems. People living in developed countries are surely less exposed to mycotoxins than those in developing countries. This is due to several factors, e.g. abundance of food resources, modern food handling and preservation technology, and effective regulation and control of food quality.

However, commodities imported from developing countries can increase the overall risk of exposure if strict regulatory policies are not enforced. In developed countries, apart from peculiar regional circumstances, the overall situation is characterised by widespread contamination at low levels, leading to human health risk related to chronic exposure.

Except for AFM1, which is within tolerable limits of consumption, available data show that in a considerable part of the world PMDTIs are exceeded for fumonisin and DON. It is also reasonable to hypothesize that further acquisition of data could show that dangerous levels of T-2/HT-2 and OTA are being ingested. Additional warnings arise from the fact that the single mycotoxin approach in the definition of PMDTI ignores the potentially additive and/or synergic toxicity of diverse mycotoxins that very frequently coexist in foods, especially cereals. Considering several factors such as:

1) frequency and levels of contamination;2) relative importance of the food in a diet; and 3) available toxicological information, some peculiar situations are worthy of consideration. OTA seems to be, among the most common mycotoxins, the one that should be monitored with the maximum attention because of its occurrence in almost all foods, thus leading to potentially high total dietary intake. In a hypothetical contaminated foods warning list, cereals should be listed first, because of their worldwide dietary importance, and because of the demonstrated natural co-occurrence of almost all the possible combinations of the major mycotoxins, at sometimes elevated levels. As a final concern among human categories, children merit the utmost consideration by researchers and public authorities because their diets lack diversity, their unfavourable exposure dose:body weight ratio, and their greater sensitivity.

Researchers are called to gather more toxicological and epidemiological information. The detection of biomarkers in biological fluids can be an useful tool for establishing effective mycotoxin exposure levels, as confirmed by the growing interest of scientists in this field. Dietary strategies that can prevent or reduce the toxic effects of mycotoxins should also be further explored. Public authorities are charged to set worldwide harmonious regulatory limits, avoiding economic special interests.


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Authors: FABIO GALVANO1, ALBERTO RITIENI2, ANTONINO DE LORENZO3, GIANFRANCO PIVA4 and AMEDEO PIETRI4
1Department of Agro-forestry and Environmental Science, Mediterranean University of Reggio Calabria, Italy
2Department of Food Science, Federico II University, Napoli, Italy
3Department of Neuroscience, University of Tor Vergata, Rome
4Institute of Food Science and Nutrition, Catholic University of the Sacred Heart, Piacenza, Italy

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Sheila Sanchez
Sheila Sanchez
12 de noviembre de 2008
This is a helpful article, especially for those of us working in the food industry. It increases our awareness of the hazardous effects of mycotoxins, not only for the food animals, but also for the consumers as well. Thanks so much for sharing this! Sheila
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Dr.kedar Karki
Dr.kedar Karki
11 de mayo de 2008
This article is very useful to upgrade awareness of mycotoxin threat in human health.
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Rochmiyati Setiarsih
Rochmiyati Setiarsih
24 de marzo de 2008
This article is very useful to elevate awareness of mycotoxin threat in human health.
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Terrilee
Terrilee
13 de abril de 2007
This article is extremely informative and interesting! I would not have been able to understand it as well though, had I not been watching Know The Cause on Dish Network Health Channel, with host: Doug Kaufmann. He is the main reason I know about mycotoxins. I have forever changed my eating habits!! Thank you from myself and my family. Terrilee McCann
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HA DUONG THI THANH
Minh Dang Trading and Servicing Company
21 de diciembre de 2006
It is very interesting subject for my company business particularly and for Vietnam situation Hot issue in this subject. From where we may have the Food savety rules and standard specification in order to be applying in Vietnam? Please advice.Thank you. Duong thi thanh Ha
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