Guidance on the risk assessment of substances present in food intended for infants below 16 weeks of age

Hardy, Anthony and Benford, Diane and Halldorsson, Thorhallur and Jeger, Michael John and Knutsen, Helle Katrine and More, Simon and Naegeli, Hanspeter and Noteborn, Hubert and Ockleford, Colin and Ricci, Antonia and Rychen, Guido and Schlatter, Josef R and Silano, Vittorio and Solecki, Roland and Turck, Dominique and Bresson, Jean-Louis and Dusemund, Birgit and Gundert-Remy, Ursula and Kersting, Mathilde and Lambré, Claude and Penninks, André and Tritscher, Angelika and Waalkens-Berendsen, Ine and Woutersen, Ruud and Arcella, Davide and Court Marques, Daniele and Dorne, Jean-Lou and Kass, George EN and Mortensen, Alicja (2017) Guidance on the risk assessment of substances present in food intended for infants below 16 weeks of age. EFSA Journal, 15 (5): 04849. ISSN 1831-4732

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Abstract

Abstract Following a request from the European Commission to EFSA, the EFSA Scientific Committee (SC) prepared a guidance for the risk assessment of substances present in food intended for infants below 16 weeks of age. In its approach to develop this guidance, the EFSA SC took into account, among others, (i) an exposure assessment based on infant formula as the only source of nutrition; (ii) knowledge of organ development in human infants, including the development of the gut, metabolic and excretory capacities, the brain and brain barriers, the immune system, the endocrine and reproductive systems; (iii) the overall toxicological profile of the substance identified through the standard toxicological tests, including critical effects; (iv) the relevance for the human infant of the neonatal experimental animal models used. The EFSA SC notes that during the period from birth up to 16 weeks, infants are expected to be exclusively fed on breast milk and/or infant formula. The EFSA SC views this period as the time where health-based guidance values for the general population do not apply without further considerations. High infant formula consumption per body weight is derived from 95th percentile consumption. The first weeks of life is the time of the highest relative consumption on a body weight basis. Therefore, when performing an exposure assessment, the EFSA SC proposes to use the high consumption value of 260 mL/kg bw per day. A decision tree approach is proposed that enables a risk assessment of substances present in food intended for infants below 16 weeks of age. The additional information needed when testing substances present in food for infants below 16 weeks of age and the approach to be taken for the risk assessment are on a case-by-case basis, depending on whether the substance is added intentionally to food and is systemically available.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
EFSA Journal
Additional Information:
doi: 10.2903/j.efsa.2017.4849
Subjects:
?? infantsneonatesadihealth-based guidance valuesdevelopment ??
ID Code:
130914
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
29 Jan 2019 12:00
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
15 Jul 2024 18:52