Nutritional and Safety Assessments of Foods and Feeds Nutritionally Improved through Biotechnology: Case Studies: Executive Summary of a Task Force Report by the International Life Sciences Institute, Washington, D.C
Autor: | Gijs Kleter, Martina Newell-McGloughlin, Yong Gao, R. H. Phipps, Marceline Egnin, Raymond D. Shillito, Bruce M. Chassy, Kevin Glenn, Penelope Nestel |
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Rok vydání: | 2007 |
Předmět: |
Crops
Agricultural Nutritional Sciences Process (engineering) Advisory Committees Food Genetically Modified Golden rice Developing country medicine Humans Production (economics) business.industry Food safety Private sector medicine.disease Animal Feed United States Biotechnology Malnutrition Consumer Product Safety Food Food Technology Livestock business Nutritive Value Food Analysis Food Science |
Zdroj: | Journal of Food Science. 72:R131-R137 |
ISSN: | 1750-3841 0022-1147 |
Popis: | During the last 2 decades, the public and private sectors have made substantial international research progress toward improving the nutritional value of a wide range of food and feed crops. Nevertheless, significant numbers of people still suffer from the effects of undernutrition. In addition, the nutritional quality of feed is often a limiting factor in livestock production systems, particularly those in developing countries. As newly developed crops with nutritionally improved traits come closer to being available to producers and consumers, we must ensure that scientifically sound and efficient processes are used to assess the safety and nutritional quality of these crops. Such processes will facilitate deploying these crops to those world areas with large numbers of people who need them. This document describes 5 case studies of crops with improved nutritional value. These case studies examine the principles and recommendations published by the Intl. Life Sciences Inst. (ILSI) in 2004 for the safety and nutritional assessment of foods and feeds derived from nutritionally improved crops (ILSI 2004). One overarching conclusion that spans all 5 case studies is that the comparative safety assessment process is a valid approach. Such a process has been endorsed by many publications and organizations, including the 2004 ILSI publication. The type and extent of data that are appropriate for a scientifically sound comparative safety assessment are presented on a case-by-case basis in a manner that takes into account scientific results published since the 2004 ILSI report. This report will appear in the January issue of Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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