AI Article Synopsis

  • Glyphosate has been a topic of heated debate since being classified as potentially carcinogenic by the International Agency for Research on Cancer in 2015, yet there is limited data on human exposure to glyphosate and its breakdown product, AMPA.
  • A review of 21 studies utilizing human biomonitoring found inconsistencies in exposure data due to variations in sampling strategies, methods, and data presentation, which complicates risk assessment.
  • The analysis suggests that while animal studies indicate no significant health risks related to glyphosate exposure, recent human metabolism research shows lower excretion rates, indicating that actual human exposure levels may be closer to health concern thresholds than previously thought.

Article Abstract

Glyphosate continues to attract controversial debate following the International Agency for Research on Cancer carcinogenicity classification in 2015. Despite its ubiquitous presence in our environment, there remains a dearth of data on human exposure to both glyphosate and its main biodegradation product aminomethylphosphonic (AMPA). Herein, we reviewed and compared results from 21 studies that use human biomonitoring (HBM) to measure urinary glyphosate and AMPA. Elucidation of the level and range of exposure was complicated by differences in sampling strategy, analytical methods, and data presentation. Exposure data is required to enable a more robust regulatory risk assessment, and these studies included higher occupational exposures, environmental exposures, and vulnerable groups such as children. There was also considerable uncertainty regarding the absorption and excretion pattern of glyphosate and AMPA in humans. This information is required to back-calculate exposure doses from urinary levels and thus, compared with health-based guidance values. Back-calculations based on animal-derived excretion rates suggested that there were no health concerns in relation to glyphosate exposure (when compared with EFSA acceptable daily intake (ADI)). However, recent human metabolism data has reported as low as a 1% urinary excretion rate of glyphosate. Human exposures extrapolated from urinary glyphosate concentrations found that upper-bound levels may be much closer to the ADI than previously reported.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7560361PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/toxics8030060DOI Listing

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