EFSA Journal (Dec 2016)

Dietary reference values for thiamin

  • EFSA Panel on Dietetic Products, Nutrition and Allergies (NDA),
  • Dominique Turck,
  • Jean‐Louis Bresson,
  • Barbara Burlingame,
  • Tara Dean,
  • Susan Fairweather‐Tait,
  • Marina Heinonen,
  • Karen Ildico Hirsch‐Ernst,
  • Inge Mangelsdorf,
  • Harry J McArdle,
  • Androniki Naska,
  • Grażyna Nowicka,
  • Kristina Pentieva,
  • Yolanda Sanz,
  • Alfonso Siani,
  • Anders Sjödin,
  • Martin Stern,
  • Daniel Tomé,
  • Henk Van Loveren,
  • Marco Vinceti,
  • Peter Willatts,
  • Christel Lamberg‐Allardt,
  • Hildegard Przyrembel,
  • Inge Tetens,
  • Jelena Gudelj Rakic,
  • Sofia Ioannidou,
  • Agnès deSesmaisons‐Lecarré,
  • Annette Cecilia Forss,
  • Monika Neuhäuser‐Berthold

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2903/j.efsa.2016.4653
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 12
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract Following a request from the European Commission, the EFSA Panel on Dietetic Products, Nutrition and Allergies (NDA) derived dietary reference values (DRVs) for thiamin (vitamin B1). The Panel considers that data from depletion–repletion studies in adults on the amount of dietary thiamin intake associated with the erythrocyte transketolase activity coefficient (αETK) < 1.15, generally considered to reflect an adequate thiamin status, or with the restoration of normal (baseline) erythrocyte transketolase activity, without a sharp increase in urinary thiamin excretion, can be used to estimate thiamin requirement. In the absence of new scientific evidence, the Panel endorses the average requirement (AR) of 0.072 mg/MJ (0.3 mg/1,000 kcal) for all adults proposed by the Scientific Committee for Food (SCF) in 1993 on the basis of one depletion–repletion study, in which both αETK and urinary thiamin excretion were measured. Results from other depletion–repletion studies are in agreement with this value. The Panel agrees on the coefficient of variation of 20% used by the SCF to cover uncertainties related to distribution of thiamin requirements in the general population, and endorses the population reference intake (PRI) of 0.1 mg/MJ (0.4 mg/1,000 kcal) set by the SCF for all adults. The same AR and PRI as for adults, expressed in mg/MJ, are proposed for infants aged 7–11 months, children aged 1 to < 18 years, and during pregnancy and lactation, under the assumption that the relationship between thiamin requirement and energy requirement is the same in all population groups.

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