A Roadmap for Hazard Monitoring and Risk Assessment of Marine Biotoxins on the Basis of Chemical and Biological Test Systems

Autor/a

Daneshian, Mardas

Botana, Luis M.

Bottein, Marie-Yasmine Dechraoui

Buckland, Gemma

Campàs, Mònica

Dennison, Ngaire

Dickey, Robert W.

Diogène, Jorge

Fessard, Valérie

Hartung, Thomas

Humpage, Andrew

Leist, Marcel

Molgó, Jordi

Quilliam, Michael A.

Rovida, Costanza

Suarez-Isla, Benjamin A.

Tubaro, Aurelia

Wagner, Kristina

Zoller, Otmar

Dietrich, Daniel

Fecha de publicación

2013-11-01



Resumen

Aquatic food accounts for over 40% of global animal food products, and the potential contamination with toxins of algal origin – marine biotoxins – poses a health threat for consumers. The gold standards to assess toxins in aquatic food have traditionally been in vivo methods, i.e., the mouse as well as the rat bioassay. Besides ethical concerns, there is also a need for more reliable test methods because of low inter-species comparability, high intra-species variability, the high number of false positive and negative results as well as questionable extrapolation of quantitative risk to humans. For this reason, a transatlantic group of experts in the field of marine biotoxins was convened from academia and regulatory safety authorities to discuss future approaches to marine biotoxin testing. In this report they provide a background on the toxin classes, on their chemical characterization, the epidemiology, on risk assessment and management, as well as on their assumed mode of action. Most importantly, physiological functional assays such as in vitro bioassays and also analytical techniques, e.g., liquid chromatography coupled mass spectrometry (LC-MS), as substitutes for the rodent bioassay are reviewed. This forms the basis for recommendations on methodologies for hazard monitoring and risk assessment, establishment of causality of intoxications in human cases, a roadmap for research and development of human-relevant functional assays, as well as new approaches for a consumer directed safety concept.

Tipo de documento

Artículo

Versión del documento

Versión publicada

Lengua

Inglés

Materias CDU

574 - Ecología general y biodiversidad

Páginas

59

Publicado por

ALTEX Edition

Es versión de

ALTEX - Alternatives to Animal Experimentation

Derechos

Attribution 4.0 International

Attribution 4.0 International

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