Bisphenol A in dairy products, amount, potential risks, and the various analytical methods, a systematic review

•BPA was detected in dairy samples, but it was not dangerous in terms of risk assessment.•One of the causes of BPA contamination in dairy products is their production processes.•The most common method of measuring BPA is based on liquid chromatography. This systematic study deals with the amount of...

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Veröffentlicht in:Food Chemistry: X 2024-03, Vol.21, p.101142, Article 101142
Hauptverfasser: Ghahremani, Mohammad-Hossein, Ghazi-Khansari, Mahmoud, Farsi, Zahra, Yazdanfar, Najmeh, Jahanbakhsh, Mahadi, Sadighara, Parisa
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•BPA was detected in dairy samples, but it was not dangerous in terms of risk assessment.•One of the causes of BPA contamination in dairy products is their production processes.•The most common method of measuring BPA is based on liquid chromatography. This systematic study deals with the amount of bisphenol A (BPA) in milk and dairy products, its analytical methods, and risk assessment. Milk is one of the drinks that has a high consumption. Bisphenol A can be present both in raw milk and its amount undergoes changes during the pasteurization process. This review was conducted by searching for the keywords Bisphenol A, BPA milk, dairy product, cheese, cream, butter, yogurt, measurement, detection, and analysis in different databases. The search was done in three databases, Scopus, PubMed and Science Direct. The largest number of studies on the determination of bisphenol A belonged to Asian and European countries. The amount of bisphenol A in milks was observed in the range from ND to 640 ng/mL. Furthermore, the amount of BPA in the tested cheese samples was observed in the ND range up to 6.1 ng/g and in the yogurt samples in the ND range up to 4.4 ng/g. The most used analytical method was based on liquid chromatography. The most used solvent for extraction was methanol or acetonitrile. HQ (Hazard Quotient) was also calculated in some studies. There was no risk in terms of milk consumption due to BPA contamination in extracted data.
ISSN:2590-1575
2590-1575
DOI:10.1016/j.fochx.2024.101142