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A Risk Assessment of Aflatoxin M1 Exposure in Low and Mid-Income Dairy Consumers in Kenya. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Aflatoxin M₁ (AFM₁) is a human carcinogen commonly found in milk products in Nairobi, with 99.5% of the milk tested showing contamination.
  • The cancer risk from AFM₁ is low, with formal market consumers facing slightly lower risks compared to low-income informal market consumers; overall risk is approximately 0.004 cases per 100,000.
  • However, AFM₁ exposure could contribute to stunting in children, affecting 2.7% of them, particularly impacting growth rates in both middle and low-income families, underscoring the need for more research on AFM₁'s health effects.

Article Abstract

Aflatoxin M₁ (AFM₁), a human carcinogen, is found in milk products and may have potentially severe health impacts on milk consumers. We assessed the risk of cancer and stunting as a result of AFM₁ consumption in Nairobi, Kenya, using worst case assumptions of toxicity and data from previous studies. Almost all (99.5%) milk was contaminated with AFM₁. Cancer risk caused by AFM₁ was lower among consumers purchasing from formal markets (0.003 cases per 100,000) than for low-income consumers (0.006 cases per 100,000) purchasing from informal markets. Overall cancer risk (0.004 cases per 100,000) from AFM₁ alone was low. Stunting is multifactorial, but assuming only AFM₁ consumption was the determinant, consumption of milk contaminated with AFM₁ levels found in this study could contribute to 2.1% of children below three years in middle-income families, and 2.4% in low-income families, being stunted. Overall, 2.7% of children could hypothetically be stunted due to AFM₁ exposure from milk. Based on our results AFM₁ levels found in milk could contribute to an average of -0.340 height for age z-score reduction in growth. The exposure to AFM₁ from milk is 46 ng/day on average, but children bear higher exposure of 3.5 ng/kg bodyweight (bw)/day compared to adults, at 0.8 ng/kg bw/day. Our paper shows that concern over aflatoxins in milk in Nairobi is disproportionate if only risk of cancer is considered, but that the effect on stunting children might be much more significant from a public health perspective; however, there is still insufficient data on the health effects of AFM₁.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6162552PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/toxins10090348DOI Listing

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