- Building a strong and dynamic consortium within the environment-food safety-human biomonitoring scientific communities to harmonise and mutualise the current and future resources
- Updating databases with the aim to improve the annotation quality, if possible, through automated procedures for sustainable deployment
- Pursuing the development of an extended, unified, sustainable and open access European Mass spectrometry reference library, following the MassBank standards and hosting facilities for sustainable deployment
Overview
Across Europe, thousands of chemicals are currently present in consumer products, the environment, and food chains. Yet, for many of these substances, limited or no information is available regarding human and environmental exposure. This substantial data gap poses a serious challenge to policymakers, who require robust evidence to assess risks and implement effective regulatory measures – particularly when dealing with complex, real-life chemical mixtures ↗.
Recent advances in high-resolution mass spectrometry have opened new possibilities for detecting both known and previously unrecognised substances through suspect screening and non-targeted analysis. These innovative approaches allow scientists to identify emerging contaminants without prior knowledge of their presence, making them powerful tools in early detection and risk assessment.
However, a critical bottleneck remains. While numerous software tools exist to handle parts of the data processing workflow, such as peak picking ↗, alignment, and chemical annotation, there is currently no integrated, user-friendly, or standardised solution capable of managing the full process efficiently. Furthermore, guidance is lacking on how to select and parameterise these tools in a consistent and reproducible manner.
This project is developing a sustainable, open-access data processing pipeline, designed to automate all key steps in suspect and non-targeted screening (SS/NTS) workflows. It is incorporating quality assurance and control measures, while also ensuring high-throughput capacity suitable for large-scale studies.
By doing so, the project is supporting the creation of a harmonised early warning framework, capable of linking chemical monitoring across the environment, food, and human health. This will ultimately enhance regulatory preparedness and improve public health protection across Europe.