Exposure assessment for dioxin-like PCBs intake from organic and conventional meat integrating cooking and digestion effects. Tressou, J., Ben Abdallah, N., Planche, C., Dervilly-Pinel, G., Sans, P., Engel, E., & Albert, I. 110:251–261.
Exposure assessment for dioxin-like PCBs intake from organic and conventional meat integrating cooking and digestion effects [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
In this paper, exposure to Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) related to bovine meat consumption is assessed based on multiples sources of data, namely data collected within the national research project “SoMeat” that objectively assesses the potential risks and benefits of organic and conventional food production systems in terms of contaminants respective contents. The work focuses on dioxin like PCBs in bovine meat in France. A modular Bayesian approach is proposed including measures after production, effect of cooking, levels and frequency of consumption and effect of digestion. In each module, a model is built and prior information can be integrated through previously acquired data commonly used in food risk assessment or vague priors. The output of the global model is the exposure including both production modes (organic and conventional) for three different cooking intensities (rare, medium, and well-done), before digestion and after digestion. The main results show that organic meat is more contaminated than conventional meat in mean after production stage and after cooking although cooking reduces the contamination level. This work is a first step of refined risk assessment integrating different steps such as cooking and digestion in the context of chemical risk assessment similarly to current microbiological risk assessments.
@article{tressou_exposure_2017,
	title = {Exposure assessment for dioxin-like {PCBs} intake from organic and conventional meat integrating cooking and digestion effects},
	volume = {110},
	issn = {02786915},
	url = {https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0278691517306300},
	doi = {10.1016/j.fct.2017.10.032},
	abstract = {In this paper, exposure to Polychlorinated biphenyls ({PCBs}) related to bovine meat consumption is assessed based on multiples sources of data, namely data collected within the national research project “{SoMeat}” that objectively assesses the potential risks and benefits of organic and conventional food production systems in terms of contaminants respective contents. The work focuses on dioxin like {PCBs} in bovine meat in France. A modular Bayesian approach is proposed including measures after production, effect of cooking, levels and frequency of consumption and effect of digestion. In each module, a model is built and prior information can be integrated through previously acquired data commonly used in food risk assessment or vague priors. The output of the global model is the exposure including both production modes (organic and conventional) for three different cooking intensities (rare, medium, and well-done), before digestion and after digestion. The main results show that organic meat is more contaminated than conventional meat in mean after production stage and after cooking although cooking reduces the contamination level. This work is a first step of refined risk assessment integrating different steps such as cooking and digestion in the context of chemical risk assessment similarly to current microbiological risk assessments.},
	pages = {251--261},
	journaltitle = {Food and Chemical Toxicology},
	author = {Tressou, Jessica and Ben Abdallah, Nadia and Planche, Christelle and Dervilly-Pinel, Gaud and Sans, Pierre and Engel, Erwan and Albert, Isabelle},
	urldate = {2019-03-29},
	date = {2017-12},
	langid = {english},
	file = {Tressou et al. - 2017 - Exposure assessment for dioxin-like PCBs intake fr.pdf:C\:\\Users\\ygu\\Documents\\PCPOR066_YGU\\YGU\\Zotero\\storage\\7QIIZGJM\\Tressou et al. - 2017 - Exposure assessment for dioxin-like PCBs intake fr.pdf:application/pdf}
}

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