Bisphenol A and Three Other Bisphenol Analogues in Canned Fish Products from the Canadian Market 2014
Cao XL, Popovic S · 2015 · Journal of Food Protection
DOI: 10.4315/0362-028X.JFP-15-055View source ↗
“BPA was detected in all 52 canned fish products, but at much lower levels compared with a previous study; levels ranged from 0.96 to 265 ng/g (average, 28 ng/g).”
Summary
This Canadian government laboratory study tested 52 canned fish products from the 2014 Canadian retail market for bisphenol A (BPA) and three related compounds (BPB, BPE, BPF) using gas chromatography mass spectrometry. The headline finding: BPA was detectable in every one of the 52 products, but at substantially lower levels than a comparable study from five years earlier. The concentration range was 0.96 to 265 nanograms per gram, with an average of 28 ng/g. Three of the four BPA analogues were essentially absent — BPB and BPE were not detected in any product, and BPF appeared in only four samples at low concentrations (1.8 to 5.7 ng/g) — suggesting BPA is still the dominant epoxy resin used in current can liners. The few outliers above 100 ng/g came from a single newly-marketed brand, indicating that brand-level differences in liner formulation drive most of the variation. Industry-wide, the data show measurable downward progress in canned-fish BPA exposure.
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