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Inorganic arsenic in Chinese food and its cancer risk

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Inorganic arsenic in Chinese food and its cancer risk. / Li, Gang; Sun, Guo-Xin; Williams, Paul N. et al.
In: Environment International, Vol. 37, No. 7, 2011, p. 1219 - 1225.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Li, G, Sun, G-X, Williams, PN, Nunes, L & Zhu, Y-G 2011, 'Inorganic arsenic in Chinese food and its cancer risk', Environment International, vol. 37, no. 7, pp. 1219 - 1225. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envint.2011.05.007

APA

Li, G., Sun, G.-X., Williams, P. N., Nunes, L., & Zhu, Y.-G. (2011). Inorganic arsenic in Chinese food and its cancer risk. Environment International, 37(7), 1219 - 1225. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envint.2011.05.007

Vancouver

Li G, Sun GX, Williams PN, Nunes L, Zhu YG. Inorganic arsenic in Chinese food and its cancer risk. Environment International. 2011;37(7):1219 - 1225. doi: 10.1016/j.envint.2011.05.007

Author

Li, Gang ; Sun, Guo-Xin ; Williams, Paul N. et al. / Inorganic arsenic in Chinese food and its cancer risk. In: Environment International. 2011 ; Vol. 37, No. 7. pp. 1219 - 1225.

Bibtex

@article{820e2902a3bc4cf7b2eb1426ad465cba,
title = "Inorganic arsenic in Chinese food and its cancer risk",
abstract = "Even moderate arsenic exposure may lead to health problems, and thus quantifying inorganic arsenic (iAs) exposure from food for different population groups in China is essential. By analyzing the data from the China National Nutrition and Health Survey (CNNHS) and collecting reported values of iAs in major food groups, we developed a framework of calculating average iAs daily intake for different regions of China. Based on this framework, cancer risks from iAs in food was deterministically and probabilistically quantified. The article presents estimates for health risk due to the ingestion of food products contaminated with arsenic. Both per individual and for total population estimates were obtained. For the total population, daily iAs intake is around 42 μg day− 1, and rice is the largest contributor of total iAs intake accounting for about 60%. Incremental lifetime cancer risk from food iAs intake is 106 per 100,000 for adult individuals and the median population cancer risk is 177 per 100,000 varying between regions. Population in the Southern region has a higher cancer risk than that in the Northern region and the total population. Sensitive analysis indicated that cancer slope factor, ingestion rates of rice, aquatic products and iAs concentration in rice were the most relevant variables in the model, as indicated by their higher contribution to variance of the incremental lifetime cancer risk. We conclude that rice may be the largest contributor of iAs through food route for the Chinese people. The population from the South has greater cancer risk than that from the North and the whole population. ",
keywords = "Arsenic, Exposure, Cancer risk, Food, Inorganic",
author = "Gang Li and Guo-Xin Sun and Williams, {Paul N.} and Luis Nunes and Yong-Guan Zhu",
year = "2011",
doi = "10.1016/j.envint.2011.05.007",
language = "English",
volume = "37",
pages = "1219 -- 1225",
journal = "Environment International",
issn = "0160-4120",
publisher = "Elsevier Ltd",
number = "7",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Inorganic arsenic in Chinese food and its cancer risk

AU - Li, Gang

AU - Sun, Guo-Xin

AU - Williams, Paul N.

AU - Nunes, Luis

AU - Zhu, Yong-Guan

PY - 2011

Y1 - 2011

N2 - Even moderate arsenic exposure may lead to health problems, and thus quantifying inorganic arsenic (iAs) exposure from food for different population groups in China is essential. By analyzing the data from the China National Nutrition and Health Survey (CNNHS) and collecting reported values of iAs in major food groups, we developed a framework of calculating average iAs daily intake for different regions of China. Based on this framework, cancer risks from iAs in food was deterministically and probabilistically quantified. The article presents estimates for health risk due to the ingestion of food products contaminated with arsenic. Both per individual and for total population estimates were obtained. For the total population, daily iAs intake is around 42 μg day− 1, and rice is the largest contributor of total iAs intake accounting for about 60%. Incremental lifetime cancer risk from food iAs intake is 106 per 100,000 for adult individuals and the median population cancer risk is 177 per 100,000 varying between regions. Population in the Southern region has a higher cancer risk than that in the Northern region and the total population. Sensitive analysis indicated that cancer slope factor, ingestion rates of rice, aquatic products and iAs concentration in rice were the most relevant variables in the model, as indicated by their higher contribution to variance of the incremental lifetime cancer risk. We conclude that rice may be the largest contributor of iAs through food route for the Chinese people. The population from the South has greater cancer risk than that from the North and the whole population.

AB - Even moderate arsenic exposure may lead to health problems, and thus quantifying inorganic arsenic (iAs) exposure from food for different population groups in China is essential. By analyzing the data from the China National Nutrition and Health Survey (CNNHS) and collecting reported values of iAs in major food groups, we developed a framework of calculating average iAs daily intake for different regions of China. Based on this framework, cancer risks from iAs in food was deterministically and probabilistically quantified. The article presents estimates for health risk due to the ingestion of food products contaminated with arsenic. Both per individual and for total population estimates were obtained. For the total population, daily iAs intake is around 42 μg day− 1, and rice is the largest contributor of total iAs intake accounting for about 60%. Incremental lifetime cancer risk from food iAs intake is 106 per 100,000 for adult individuals and the median population cancer risk is 177 per 100,000 varying between regions. Population in the Southern region has a higher cancer risk than that in the Northern region and the total population. Sensitive analysis indicated that cancer slope factor, ingestion rates of rice, aquatic products and iAs concentration in rice were the most relevant variables in the model, as indicated by their higher contribution to variance of the incremental lifetime cancer risk. We conclude that rice may be the largest contributor of iAs through food route for the Chinese people. The population from the South has greater cancer risk than that from the North and the whole population.

KW - Arsenic

KW - Exposure

KW - Cancer risk

KW - Food

KW - Inorganic

U2 - 10.1016/j.envint.2011.05.007

DO - 10.1016/j.envint.2011.05.007

M3 - Journal article

VL - 37

SP - 1219

EP - 1225

JO - Environment International

JF - Environment International

SN - 0160-4120

IS - 7

ER -