2023
DOI: 10.3390/recycling8060087
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Safety Assessment of Recycled Plastics from Post-Consumer Waste with a Combination of a Miniaturized Ames Test and Chromatographic Analysis

Elisa Mayrhofer,
Lukas Prielinger,
Victor Sharp
et al.

Abstract: European circular economy goals require the use of recycled polymers in sensitive applications such as food packaging. As plastic recyclates can contain unknown post-consumer substances, the European Food Safety Authority evaluates recycling processes using a worst-case assumption: all contaminants are DNA-reactive mutagens/carcinogens with extremely low safety thresholds. The current data are insufficient to estimate whether this assumption is justified. To provide scientific evidence on the presence of DNA-r… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…This indicates the absence of any DNA-reactive mutagenic substances, which can be a potential health concern ( Table 4 ). In a recent study, Mayrhofer et al [ 73 ] assessed recycled plastic samples including, PE, PP, PS, and PET, to determine if DNA-reactive mutagenic substances were present. DNA-reactive mutagenic substances were not detected in recycled PET, but in other types of recycled plastics (PE, PP, PS), they were detected in 51 samples from a total of 119 recycled plastic samples.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This indicates the absence of any DNA-reactive mutagenic substances, which can be a potential health concern ( Table 4 ). In a recent study, Mayrhofer et al [ 73 ] assessed recycled plastic samples including, PE, PP, PS, and PET, to determine if DNA-reactive mutagenic substances were present. DNA-reactive mutagenic substances were not detected in recycled PET, but in other types of recycled plastics (PE, PP, PS), they were detected in 51 samples from a total of 119 recycled plastic samples.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%