Occurrence of glycidyl esters in infant formula products on the Canadian market between 2015 and 2019
- DOI
- Language of the publication
- English
- Date
- 2022-11-11
- Type
- Article
- Author(s)
- Schneider, Jakob F.
- Becalski, Adam
- Zhao, Tony
- Liu, Yihu
- Chen, Fuqi
- Rawn, Dorothea F. K.
- Publisher
- Taylor & Francis
Abstract
Glycidyl fatty acid esters (GEs) are processing contaminants formed during refining steps of vegetable oils. ‘In vivo’ hydrolysis of GEs releases potentially carcinogenic and genotoxic glycidol (2,3-epoxy-1-propanol). Occurrence of GEs in vegetable oils used for infant formula manufacturing may pose a potential health concern for formula-fed infants. Refined oils are commonly used as the main fat ingredient in formula manufacturing. For this study, different infant formula products (powders, concentrates and ready-to-feed formula products) were purchased and analysed in 2015 (35 samples) and 2019 (33 samples). Seven individual GEs were analysed by LC-MS/MS via direct approach by stable isotope dilution analysis, and total bound glycidol concentrations were calculated. Concentrations of bound glycidol in reconstituted formula reached maxima of 40.3 ng/g in the 2015 samples and 31.5 ng/g in the samples collected in 2019, with respective means of 8.7 ng/g and 6.7 ng/g. The analysed bound glycidol concentrations are comparable with concentration ranges from other studies, but are higher than observed in studies from the European market. Temporal trend data show a reduction of bound glycidol concentrations in 2019. GE concentrations were compared across different manufacturers.
Subject
- Health,
- Health and safety