“…Indeed, in vitro upper and lower GI systems would help investigating the interactions of food chemical contaminants with main physicochemical parameters of the child digestive tract (low pH, enzymes, bile…), as well as resident gut microbiota (so called toxicomicrobiomics) (Abdelsalam et al, 2020;Sharma et al, 2017;Tralau et al, 2015). They would thus give useful information on the fate, bioaccessibility and metabolization (if any, especially by gut microbiota) of those compounds in the child gut, when ingested with different food matrices, taking also into account the role of soil that is frequently swallowed by infants (Defois et al, 2018(Defois et al, , 2017Joly et al, 2013;Liu et al, 2018;Yin et al, 2016). Lastly, all the potentialities of child in vitro models applied to food pollutants may be extended to food additives, e.g.…”