Comprehensive Evaluation of Dietary Exposure and Health Risk of Polychlorinated Naphthalenes.
Cui LiLei ZhangQiuting YangYongning WuMinghui ZhengLili YangBing LyuXiaoyun LiuRong JinYuxiang SunChangzhi ChenYujue YangLinjun QinBingcheng LinDa LiJingguang LiMinghui ZhengPublished in: Environmental science & technology (2022)
Intake from food is considered an important route of human exposure to polychlorinated naphthalenes. To our knowledge, several studies have quantified dietary exposure but only in European countries and measuring only a few of the 75 congeners. In addition, the influence of source diversity on human exposure has seldom been assessed. We analyzed 192 composite food samples composed of 17,280 subsamples from 24 provinces in China to measure the concentrations of polychlorinated naphthalenes and estimate their daily intake and potential health risks on a national scale. The estimated cancer risk was in the range of 6.8 × 10 -8 to 4.6 × 10 -7 . We compared our findings for 75 congeners with reports in the literature that quantified only 12 congeners. We estimate that these 12 congeners contribute only approximately 4% to the total mass daily intake of polychlorinated naphthalenes and 70% to the total toxic equivalent quantity, indicating underestimation of dietary exposure. The contributions of combustion-associated congeners to the total concentrations of polychlorinated naphthalenes were in the range of 31-52%, suggesting that the ongoing unintentional release of these compounds from industrial thermal processes is an important factor in polychlorinated naphthalene contamination and human exposure in China.