

Cadmium (Cd) is a toxic metal, present in all matrices of the environment and a common food contaminant. Human exposure to it may elicit many diverse health impairments. The aim of this study was to assess the dietary exposure to Cd for the adult population and preschool children in Serbia using probabilistic methodology. We measured Cd in 11,227 food samples belonging to 50 food items on the Serbian market. Cd was detected in 90% of the tested food items, and in 30.8% of the overall tested samples. The food item that contributed the most to total dietary Cd intake was potatoes (median Cd concentration of 7 ng/g) in adults, and fruit and vegetable juices in children (median Cd concentration of 19 ng/g). Weekly Cd intake shown as 50th and 95th percentiles were 2.54 and 4.74 µg/kg bw in the adult population, and 3.29 and 4.93 µg/kg bw in children. The results of this study are rather preliminary and should be considered as an indication of the need for further, more refined research, which would contribute to a more realistic risk assessment as a high-priority approach, especially in the case of vulnerable subpopulations such as children. Abbreviations: AT SDR: Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry; EEA: European Environment Agency; EFSA: European Food Safety Authority; FAO/WHO: Food and Agriculture Organization/World Health Organization; HI: hazard index; IARC: International Agency for Research on Cancer; JECFA: Joint FAO/WHO Expert Committee on Food Additives; LOD: limit of detection; Cd: cadmium; TWI: tolerable weekly intake; UNEP: United Nations Environment Program; WI: weekly intake. © 2022 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.
| Engineering controlled terms: | AdditivesCadmiumChemical contaminationHealth risksInternational cooperationRisk assessment |
|---|---|
| Engineering uncontrolled terms | Adult populationsCadmium dietary intakeDietary exposure assessmentsDietary intakesMonteCarlo methodsPre schoolsProbabilistics approachRepublic of SerbiaRisks assessmentsToxic metals |
| Engineering main heading: | Monte Carlo methods |
| EMTREE drug terms: | cadmiumcadmium |
| EMTREE medical terms: | adultagedArticleatomic absorption spectrometrybakery productbody weightcacaocephalopodcertified reference materialchildcontrolled studyCrustaceadietary exposuredietary intakefemalefish productfruit and vegetable juicehumanlimit of detectionmalemeatmethodologymolluscoffaloilseedpotatopreschool childquality controlrisk assessmentschool childSerbiavegetableyoung adultchemistryfood contaminationfruitrisk assessmentSerbia |
| MeSH: | AdultCadmiumChildChild, PreschoolDietary ExposureFood ContaminationFruitHumansRisk AssessmentSerbia |
cadmium, 22537-48-0, 7440-43-9;
Cadmium
| Funding sponsor | Funding number | Acronym |
|---|---|---|
| 200161 | ||
| 451-03-68/2022-14/200161 |
This research was funded by the Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development, Republic of Serbia through Grant Agreement with University of Belgrade-Faculty of Pharmacy No: 451-03-68/2022-14/200161. The authors kindly thank \u0110ur\u0111ica Mari\u0107 for one part of the statistical analysis.
Stošić, M.; Department of Environmental Engineering and Occupational Safety and Health, Faculty of Technical Sciences, University of Novi Sad, Trg Dositeja Obradovica 6, Novi Sad, Serbia;
© Copyright 2023 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.