Acosta-Dacal Andrea, Díaz-Díaz Ricardo, Alonso-González Pablo, Bernal-Suárez María Del Mar, Parga-Dans Eva, Serra-Majem Lluis, Ortiz-Andrellucchi Adriana, Zumbado Manuel, Santos Edson, Furtado Verena, Livramento Miriam, Silva Dalila, Luzardo Octavio P
Toxicology Unit, Research Institute of Biomedical and Health Sciences (IUIBS), University of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Paseo Blas Cabrera s/n, 35016 Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Spain.
Department of Environmental Analysis, Technological Institute of the Canary Islands, C/Los Cactus no 68, Polígono Industrial de Arinaga, 35118 Agüimes, Spain.
Foods. 2025 Jul 28;14(15):2639. doi: 10.3390/foods14152639.
Food safety concerns related to pesticide residues in fruits and vegetables have increased globally, particularly in regions where monitoring programs are scarce or inconsistent. This study provides the first multi-year evaluation of pesticide contamination and associated dietary risks in Cape Verde, an African island nation increasingly reliant on imported produce. A total of 570 samples of fruits and vegetables-both locally produced and imported-were collected from major markets across the country between 2017 and 2020 and analyzed using validated multiresidue methods based on gas chromatography coupled to Ion Trap mass spectrometry (GC-IT-MS/MS), and both gas and liquid chromatography coupled to triple quadrupole tandem mass spectrometry (GC-QqQ-MS/MS and LC-QqQ-MS/MS). Residues were detected in 63.9% of fruits and 13.2% of vegetables, with imported fruits showing the highest contamination levels and diversity of compounds. Although only one sample exceeded the maximum residue limits (MRLs) set by the European Union, 80 different active substances were quantified-many of them not authorized under the current EU pesticide residue legislation. Dietary exposure was estimated using median residue levels and real consumption data from the national nutrition survey (ENCAVE 2019), enabling a refined risk assessment based on actual consumption patterns. The cumulative hazard index for the adult population was 0.416, below the toxicological threshold of concern. However, when adjusted for children aged 6-11 years-taking into account body weight and relative consumption-the cumulative index approached 1.0, suggesting a potential health risk for this vulnerable group. A limited number of compounds, including omethoate, oxamyl, imazalil, and dithiocarbamates, accounted for most of the risk. Many are banned or heavily restricted in the EU, highlighting regulatory asymmetries in global food trade. These findings underscore the urgent need for strengthened residue monitoring in Cape Verde, particularly for imported products, and support the adoption of risk-based food safety policies that consider population-specific vulnerabilities and mixture effects. The methodological framework used here can serve as a model for other low-resource countries seeking to integrate analytical data with dietary exposure in a One Health context.
全球范围内,与水果和蔬菜中农药残留相关的食品安全问题日益增加,尤其是在监测计划稀缺或不一致的地区。本研究首次对佛得角的农药污染及相关饮食风险进行了多年评估。佛得角是一个日益依赖进口农产品的非洲岛国。2017年至2020年期间,从该国主要市场共采集了570份本地生产和进口的水果及蔬菜样本,并采用基于气相色谱-离子阱质谱联用(GC-IT-MS/MS)以及气相和液相色谱-三重四极杆串联质谱联用(GC-QqQ-MS/MS和LC-QqQ-MS/MS)的经过验证的多残留方法进行分析。在63.9%的水果和13.2%的蔬菜中检测到了残留,进口水果的污染水平和化合物种类最多。虽然只有一个样本超过了欧盟设定的最大残留限量(MRLs),但定量分析了80种不同的活性物质——其中许多在现行欧盟农药残留法规下未获批准。使用中位数残留水平和国家营养调查(ENCAVE 2019)的实际消费数据估算饮食暴露量,从而能够基于实际消费模式进行精细的风险评估。成年人群的累积危害指数为0.416,低于关注的毒理学阈值。然而,在考虑6至11岁儿童的体重和相对消费量进行调整后,累积指数接近1.0,这表明该弱势群体存在潜在健康风险。包括氧乐果、杀线威异丙酯、抑霉唑和二硫代氨基甲酸盐在内的少数化合物构成了大部分风险。其中许多在欧盟被禁止或严格限制,凸显了全球食品贸易中的监管不对称。这些发现强调了在佛得角加强残留监测的迫切需求,特别是对进口产品的监测,并支持采用考虑特定人群脆弱性和混合效应的基于风险的食品安全政策。这里使用的方法框架可以作为其他资源匮乏国家在“同一个健康”背景下将分析数据与饮食暴露相结合的模型。