Home practices can mitigate furan and derivatives in vegetable-based infant meals

Food Res Int. 2024 Nov:195:114916. doi: 10.1016/j.foodres.2024.114916. Epub 2024 Aug 13.

Abstract

This study assessed the impact of current home practices including reheating, standing, and stirring on mitigation of furan and its derivatives in vegetable-based infant meals. Three vegetable-based infant meals (vegetables alone, with fish, with meat) underwent different home practices including reheating, post-reheating standing (60, 120 and 240 s) and post-reheating stirring (30, 60, 120 and 240 s). Targeted quantification of furan, 2-methylfuran (2-MF) and 3-methylfuran (3-MF) and exploration of additional furan derivatives were undertaken in treated and untreated vegetable-based infant meals using SHS-GC-Q Exactive-Orbitrap-MS. For the three compounds, the quality of the measurements was first validated with suitable linearity, limits of quantification, precision and recoveries. A second step highlighted high concentrations of furan (78.5-103.9 µg/kg), 2-MF (4.8-10.1 µg/kg) and 3-MF (3.4-5.8 µg/kg) in the three vegetable-based infant meals before preparation and the assessment of the cumulative risk related to these three furan compounds confirmed the relevance of studying home mitigation strategies. The third step showed that post-reheating stirring was the most effective home practice for mitigation, with maximum observed reductions of 66.3, 59.9 and 57.7 % for furan, 2-MF and 3-MF, respectively. In a fourth step, a suspect screening approach carried out on SHS-GC-Q Exactive-Orbitrap MS data revealed the presence of 2-ethyl-, 2-ethyl-5-methyl-, 2-butyl- and 2-vinyl-furan in vegetable-based meals and showed a similar mitigation trend of home practices on the relative concentrations of these four additional furan derivatives. Finally, despite a significant mitigation reaching 69 % of the furan concentration, the combined effect of home practices on furan compounds was not sufficient to rule out the risk associated with the consumption of vegetable-based infant foods and additional options are discussed.

Keywords: Furan; Furan derivatives; Process-induced toxicant; Reheating; SHS-GC-Q Exactive-Orbitrap MS; Standing; Stirring; Suspect screening.

MeSH terms

  • Cooking* / methods
  • Food Contamination / analysis
  • Furans* / analysis
  • Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry*
  • Humans
  • Infant
  • Infant Food* / analysis
  • Vegetables* / chemistry

Substances

  • Furans
  • furan
  • 2-methylfuran