
pmid: 30468839
Dietary supplements are regulated by the U.S. FDA as a subset of foods. Most botanical dietary ingredients do not have pesticide tolerances, resulting in the enforcement of zero tolerance or general maximum residue limits (GMRL), rather than utilizing science-informed tolerances. In the current study, chemical-specific maximum allowable levels (MALs) were derived for 185 pesticides by converting existing, authoritative-body human health effects criteria. MALs were derived for 96% of pesticides using criteria established by the U.S. EPA. If multiple authoritative-bodies had established human health effects criteria, the most scientifically-defensible criteria was selected, taking into consideration both carcinogenic and non-carcinogenic endpoints. Five pesticides (o-phenylphenol, pirimicarb, oxadixyl, tetradifon, o,p'-DDT), lacking criteria established by the U.S. EPA had criteria established by other authoritative-bodies that were utilized in the derivation of MALs. Two pesticides did not have any established human health effects criteria (o,p'-DDD and o,p'-DDE). In total, MALs were derived from existing criteria for over 98% of the pesticides in the present study. Consequently, it is demonstrated that human health effects criteria derived by authoritative-bodies can be effectively utilized to derive chemical-specific, science-informed MALs applicable to all food commodities, including botanical ingredients, thereby, minimizing reliance on precautionary zero tolerance and GMRLs.
Dietary Supplements, Pesticide Residues, Humans, Maximum Allowable Concentration, Drug Contamination
Dietary Supplements, Pesticide Residues, Humans, Maximum Allowable Concentration, Drug Contamination
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