2025-11-07T14:55:47Z
2025-11-07T14:55:47Z
2025-10-25
2025-11-07T14:55:47Z
Mycotoxin contamination is a global threat to food safety and human health, especially in regions facing food insecurity, such as Sub-Saharan Africa. This intervention study evaluates the effectiveness of nixtamalization, a traditional alkaline cooking method, in reducing mycotoxin levels in maize and corresponding urinary biomarkers of exposure. Forty adult healthy volunteers from an informal settlement in Kliptown, Soweto (South Africa), were randomly assigned to consume control maize or visibly moldy maize subjected to nixtamalization. Nixtamalization achieved a reduction of fumonisin B3 and deoxynivalenol (DON) to unquantifiable or undetectable levels in maize, while reducing fumonisin B1 (FB1), fumonisin B2, and zearalenone (ZEN) by 95%, 95%, and 89%, respectively. Aflatoxin B1 was unquantifiable before and eliminated after treatment. Biomarker analysis revealed that after consumption of either control or nixtamalized maize, urinary levels of FB1, ZEN, and its metabolites α- and β-zearalenol (α- and β-ZEL) did not show significant differences between groups (p>0.05). DON and tenuazonic acid levels were not affected by the intervention (p>0.05), with urinary detection frequencies remaining above 90%. These results demonstrate nixtamalization effectively lowers mycotoxin levels in maize, resulting in exposure levels comparable to control maize, and highlight human biomonitoring as a sensitive tool for evaluating food safety interventions.
Article
Versió publicada
Anglès
Seguretat alimentària; Micotoxines; Àfrica subsahariana; Food security; Mycotoxins; Sub-Saharan Africa
MDPI
Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.3390/toxins17110527
Toxins, 2025, vol. 17, num.527
https://doi.org/10.3390/toxins17110527
cc-by (c) Maris, Elias et al., 2025
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/