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    Mycotoxin hazards in the Kenyan food and feed market: A retrospective study

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    Authors
    Kibugu, J.
    Mburu, D.
    Munga, L.
    Lusweti, F.
    Grace, Delia
    Lindahl, Johanna F.
    Date Issued
    2022-02
    Date Online
    2022-02
    Language
    en
    Type
    Journal Article
    Review status
    Peer Review
    Accessibility
    Open Access
    Usage rights
    CC-BY-NC-ND-4.0
    Metadata
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    Citation
    Kibugu, J., Mburu, D., Munga, L., Lusweti, F., Grace, D. and Lindahl, J. 2022. Mycotoxin hazards in the Kenyan food and feed market: A retrospective study. African Journal of Food, Agriculture, Nutrition and Development 22(1): 19306–19325.
    Permanent link to cite or share this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10568/118300
    DOI: https://doi.org/10.18697/ajfand.106.20995
    Abstract/Description
    Mycotoxins are toxic fungal metabolites naturally found in food and feed as contaminants. Animal feed and human food samples (n=1818) from three major Kenyan laboratories were categorized as compliant and non-compliant according to Kenya, America (USA) and Europe (EU) mycotoxin regulatory limits. Quantitative risk assessment of dietary aflatoxin intake in maize, wheat, peanut and dairy products in relation to human hepatocellular carcinoma was carried out employing deterministic approach. Non-compliant samples’ proportions were calculated, and logistic regression and chi-square test used to compare different commodities. Animal feed were least compliant, with 64% and 39% having total aflatoxin (AFT) levels above Kenya and USA standards, respectively. Peanuts were the most non-compliant food, with 61% and 47% samples failing Kenya and USA AFT standards respectively, while wheat was least compliant (84%) according to EU threshold for AFT. Half of baby food sampled had AFT level above Kenya and EU standards. High non-compliance rate with Kenya, USA and EU regulatory thresholds with respect to seven different mycotoxins (summarized as “mycotoxins”), and also AFT and aflatoxin M1 alone in edible materials is reported. Significant non-compliance is reported for compound animal feed, peanuts, wheat, baby food, feed ingredients, herbal healthy drink, maize and fodder feed in that order. High levels of aflatoxin residues in animal feed and human food was also observed. Lifetime human consumption of wheat and maize leads to high additional risk for primary liver cancer, human hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) associated with dietary aflatoxin, wheat and its products causing the highest disease burden. Subsequent implications and limitations of current food safety standards are discussed. Humans and animals in Kenya appear to be chronically exposed to mycotoxin hazards: this calls for surveillance and risk management. There is urgent need for enhanced and consistent surveillance of the dietary mycotoxin hazards observed in this study employing representative sampling plans. Regulation and future research need to focus on reliable analysis techniques, collection of data on toxicological effects of mycotoxins and food consumption pattern, and regulatory limits accordingly set and compliance enforced to protect vulnerable groups such as paediatric, geriatric and sick members of the society to reduce cancer burden in Kenya.
    CGIAR Author ORCID iDs
    Delia Gracehttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-0195-9489
    Johanna Lindahlhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-1175-0398
    CGIAR Impact Areas
    Nutrition, health and food security
    Other CGIAR Affiliations
    Agriculture for Nutrition and Health
    Contributes to SDGs
    SDG 2 - Zero hunger; SDG 3 - Good health and well-being
    AGROVOC Keywords
    aflatoxins; food safety; feeds
    Subjects
    AFLATOXINS; FEEDS; FOOD SAFETY;
    Countries
    Kenya
    Regions
    Africa; Eastern Africa
    Organizations Affiliated to the Authors
    Kenya Agricultural and Livestock Research Organization; Kenyatta University; International Livestock Research Institute; University of Greenwich; Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences; Uppsala University
    Collections
    • ILRI animal and human health program outputs [1547]
    • ILRI articles in journals [6643]

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