AI Article Synopsis

  • - EFSA was tasked by the European Commission to determine safe levels of lipophilic shellfish toxins in whole scallops to ensure that edible parts remain within regulatory limits after shucking, focusing on toxins like okadaic acid (OA), azaspiracid (AZA), and yessotoxin (YTX).
  • - Data from two scallop species indicated most toxin concentrations were below the detection limit, and shucking typically reduced toxin levels significantly. For safe consumption, OA levels in whole scallops must not exceed 256 μg/kg and AZA levels should remain under 217 μg/kg to ensure the gonads are below the legal limits of 160 μg/kg.
  • - To accurately predict whether scall

Article Abstract

EFSA was asked by the European Commission to provide information on levels of lipophilic shellfish toxins in whole scallops that would ensure levels in edible parts below the regulatory limits after shucking, i.e. removal of non-edible parts. This should include the okadaic acid (OA), the azaspiracid (AZA) and the yessotoxin (YTX) groups, and five species of scallops. In addition, EFSA was asked to recommend the number of scallops in an analytical sample. To address these questions, EFSA received suitable data on the three toxin groups in two scallop species, and , i.e. data on individual and pooled samples of edible and non-edible parts from contamination incidents. The majority of the concentration levels were below limit of quantification (LOQ)/limit of detection (LOD), especially in adductor muscle but also in gonads. Shucking in most cases resulted in a strong decrease in the toxin levels. For , statistical analysis showed that levels in whole scallops should not exceed 256 μg OA eq/kg or 217 μg AZA1 eq/kg to ensure that levels in gonads are below the regulatory limits of 160 μg OA or AZA1 eq/kg with 99% certainty. Such an analysis was not possible for yessotoxins or any toxin in and an assessment could only be based on upper bound levels. To ensure a 95% correct prediction on whether the level in scallops in an area or lot is correctly predicted to be compliant/non-compliant, it was shown that 10 scallops per sample would be sufficient to predict with 95% certainty if levels of OA-group toxins in the area/lot were 25% below or above the regulatory limit. However, to predict with a 95% certainty for levels between 140 and 180 μg OA eq/kg, a pooled sample of more than 30 scallops would have to be tested.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7942228PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.2903/j.efsa.2021.6422DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

levels
9
scallops
8
species scallops
8
edible parts
8
efsa asked
8
ensure levels
8
regulatory limits
8
non-edible parts
8
μg eq/kg
8
μg aza1
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!