Aflatoxin M1 in Europe between 1990-2018
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abstract
Aflatoxin M1 (AFM1) is a carcinogen metabolite that can be present in milk from lactating animals
that consume aflatoxin B1 (AFB1) contaminated feed. AFM1, in addition to being hepatotoxic and
causing carcinogenic effects, is relatively stable during milk pasteurization, storage and processing of
various dairy products, which makes it a potential food contaminant. Consumption of dairy products
has expanded rapidly over the past decade and, given the toxicity of this compound, its presence in
milk and milk products poses a high risk to the health of the consumer.
The occurrence of AFM1 in milk has been reported in many studies and considering the impact of
AFM1 on human health and the economy, it is extremely important to study and understand the
occurrence of this toxin in different countries of Europe over the years (from 1990-2018). The
objective of this work was to study the trend of the occurrence of AFM1 in dairy products, including
milk, cheese, butter and yogurt. To achieve this objective, an extensive literature search was made,
in the databases Science Direct, Web of Sciences, Scopus and B-on, on quantitative AFM1 data, to
evaluate the possible correlation between AFM1 concentration and sampling year, different types of
milk products, applied heat treatment, and animal species' influences. For the study of heat
treatment and animal species, only milk samples were considered.
Data from 106 papers (representing 65,901 samples) were extracted and analyzed using IBM SPSS
Statistics 27.0 statistical software. Data collected did not present homogeneity of variance nor
followed a normal distribution. The discussion is based Welch and Brown-Forsythe's methods,
followed by post hoc Games-Howell to evaluate differences betweens groups.
Regarding the AFM1 distribution over the years, three decades were analyzed, 1990’s (1990-1999),
2000’s (2000-2009), and 2010’s (2010-2018), and no significant differences were observed between
the two last decades. On the other hand, it was observed a significant difference between the two
last decades and the 1990´s decade, presenting the last decades the highest AFM1 levels. In what
regards dairy products, milk and yogurt were statistically similar and were the groups with the lowest
levels of AFM1. Contrarily, butter and cheese samples were statistically different, with butter
samples presenting the highest AFM1 concentration, probably due to a mass concentration effect.
Concerning animal species, significant differences were noticed between all species analyzed.
Namely, cow milk samples were the samples presenting the highest AFM1 levels, while buffalo milk
samples had the lowest AFM1 levels. Regarding heat treatment, no significant differences were
observed between raw, pasteurized and UHT milk samples.
This study revealed that the levels of AFM1 in the last two decades are higher than the 1990´s
decade, and the concentration in butter and cheese samples is higher than in milk samples.
Therefore, considering the importance of dairy products, special measures should be taken to
protect feed from contamination with AFB1, since the final levels of AFM1 will depend on the initial
levels at the primary production.
We would like to thank for the Ph.D. scholarship given to Andreia Vaz by the Foundation for Science and Technology
(FCT) —SFRH/BD/129775/2017
Funding: This work was financially supported by the Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT) under the scope of the
strategic funding of UID/BIO/04469/2019 unit. PR is grateful to FCT and FEDER under Programme PT2020 for financial support to CIMO
(UID/AGR/00690/2019).