# Safety evaluation of d‐α‐tocopheryl polyethylene glycol‐1000 succinate (Vitamin E TPGS) as a food additive

**Authors:** Laurence Castle, Monica Andreassen, Gabriele Aquilina, Maria Lourdes Bastos, Polly Boon, Biagio Fallico, Reginald FitzGerald, Maria Jose Frutos Fernandez, Bettina Grasl‐Kraupp, Ursula Gundert‐Remy, Rainer Gürtler, Eric Houdeau, Marcin Kurek, Henriqueta Louro, Patricia Morales, Sabina Passamonti, José Manuel Barat Baviera, Gisela Degen, David Gott, Jean‐Charles Leblanc, Peter Moldeus, Ine Waalkens‐Berendsen, Detlef Wölfle, Civitella Consuelo, Agnieszka Mech, Concepción Medrano‐Padial, Ana Maria Rincon, Camilla Smeraldi, Alexandra Tard, Laura Ruggeri

PMC · DOI: 10.2903/j.efsa.2025.9605 · EFSA Journal · 2025-08-11

## TL;DR

This paper evaluates the safety of Vitamin E TPGS as a food additive and concludes it is safe for use in various food categories.

## Contribution

The paper provides a new safety assessment of Vitamin E TPGS as a food additive for multiple food uses.

## Key findings

- Vitamin E TPGS is poorly absorbed and does not act as a source of Vitamin E in healthy individuals.
- No genotoxicity or reproductive/developmental effects were observed at the highest tested dose.
- The Panel concluded that the use of Vitamin E TPGS does not raise a safety concern at the proposed levels.

## Abstract

The EFSA Panel on Food Additives and Flavourings (FAF) provides a scientific opinion on the safety of d‐α‐tocopheryl polyethylene glycol‐1000 succinate (Vitamin E TPGS) as a new food additive to be used in several food categories as emulsifier. In 2007, the EFSA AFC Panel assessed TPGS as a source of tocopherol intended to be used in foods for particular nutritional uses. The Panel considered the AFC Panel assessment relevant for the present new food additive. Compositional data showed that the proposed food additive is composed of Vitamin E TPGS monoesters (> 82% w/w of the whole preparation) and diesters (< 20% w/w of the whole preparation). Data on the hydrolysis of Vitamin E TPGS showed that the ester bond between d‐α‐tocopherol and succinic acid is stable under the tested conditions, as no increase in free d‐α‐tocopherol was observed. Vitamin E TPGS is poorly absorbed and does not represent a source of Vitamin E in the healthy population. Vitamin E TPGS does not raise a concern with respect to genotoxicity and no adverse effects on reproductive and developmental parameters were observed up to 1000 mg TPGS/kg bw per day, the highest dose tested and identified as a reference point. Due to the limitations in the available data (e.g. in reporting), the Panel decided to use an MOE approach instead of deriving an ADI. The Panel considered the calculated MOEs sufficient. Based on the available data, the Panel concluded that the use of Vitamin E TPGS as a new food additive does not raise a safety concern at the proposed use and use levels.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** Vitamin E TPGS (PubChem CID 71406), tocopherol (PubChem CID 14986), succinic acid (PubChem CID 1110), d-α-tocopherol (PubChem CID 14985)

## Full-text entities

- **Chemicals:** d-alpha-tocopherol (MESH:D024502), tocopherol (MESH:D024505), Vitamin E TPGS monoesters (-), ester (MESH:D004952), Vitamin E (MESH:D014810), TPGS (MESH:C014225), succinic acid (MESH:D019802)

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

48 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12336668/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12336668