Category Archives: Microbiology

Research – Clostridioides difficile positivity rate and PCR ribotype distribution on retail potatoes in 12 European countries, January to June 2018 separator

Eurosurveillance

 infection (CDI) is a notable cause of infectious diarrhoea worldwide. In Europe, the estimated number of CDI cases in 2011–12 was 123,997 (95% confidence interval (CI): 61,018–284,857), based on a survey of healthcare-associated infections performed by the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) [1]. In 2016, as part of  surveillance performed by ECDC, 556 hospitals from 20 countries covering 24 million patient-days reported 7,711 CDI cases [2]. The symptoms can range from mild diarrhoea to potentially fatal pseudomembranous colitis. While historically regarded as a typical healthcare infection, community CDI is increasingly recognised [3].

In CDI, human-to-human transmission plays a major role, but other infection sources and transmission routes are under investigation.  has been repeatedly isolated from various foods worldwide, and it is feasible that some foods could be important vectors for its widespread dissemination [3]. Some important healthcare-associated  PCR ribotypes (RT) such as RT 027 and RT 001/072 tend to spread clonally within a single hospital, region or country, while others such as RT 014, RT 002 and RT 015 do not exhibit country-based clustering and are most likely disseminated across Europe by other sources possibly including the food chain [4]. Confirmed cases of food-associated CDI have so far not been described [3].

Existing evidence suggests that potatoes, which represent a major staple food consumed worldwide, could contribute to the spread of . Potatoes have the highest  contamination rates among all vegetables tested to date; the proportion of -positive retail potato samples ranges from 25.7% (18/70) to 53.3% (24/45) [5,6]. By contrast, the highest positivity rate in other types of vegetables such as leaf vegetables, ginger, sprouts and ready-to-eat salads is 9.4% [58] and in meats and meat products, reported positivity rates are typically below 20% [8,9]. Additionally, diverse and clinically relevant  PCR ribotypes have been previously recovered from potatoes. Certain PCR ribotypes such as RT 014/020, which are suggested to spread by non-clonal transmission networks [4], are among those often detected on potatoes [5,6]. Furthermore, potatoes are frequently imported and exported between countries. A previous study from Slovenia reported that 78.9% (15/19) of -positive retail potatoes were imported from more than 10 countries on three different continents [6].

Here we present the results of a European-wide study on  contamination of retail potatoes. Identical protocols for sampling and isolation were used for all 12 studied countries, enabling a direct comparison of the positivity rates of  on potatoes.

Research – Controlled Recirculating Wet Storage Purging V. parahaemolyticus in Oysters

MDPI

Food Illness

This work explored the effects of salinity and temperature on the efficacy of purging V. parahaemolyticus from eastern oysters (Crassostrea virginica). Oysters were inoculated with a 5-strain cocktail of V. parahaemolyticus to levels of 104 to 105 MPN (most probable number)/g and depurated in a controlled re-circulating wet-storage system with artificial seawater (ASW). Both salinity and temperature remarkably affected the efficacy for the depuration of V. parahaemolyticus from oysters during wet-storage. The wet-storage process at salinity 20 ppt at 7.5 °C or 10 °C could achieve a larger than 3 log (MPN/g) reduction of Vibrio at Day 7, which meets the FDA’s requirement as a post-harvest process for V. parahaemolyticus control. At the conditions of 10 °C and 20 ppt, a pre-chilled system could achieve a 3.54 log (MPN/g) reduction of Vibrio in oysters on Day 7. There was no significant difference in the shelf life between inoculated and untreated oysters before the depuration, with a same survival rate (stored in a 4 °C cooler for 15 days) of 93%. View Full-Text

UK – Salmonella finding closes factory and prompts large-scale recall

Food Safety News

A poultry company in England has halted production at one of its sites after finding Salmonella in chicken. Dozens of products have been recalled.

Cranswick said the facility in Hull will remain closed until an investigation into the possible cause of contamination has been completed.

A routine internal inspection identified the presence of Salmonella in some cooked chicken products.

The products are sold as ingredients for sandwiches and meals in UK retailers and food-to-go outlets.

“As a precautionary measure, we have asked our customers to remove any of their products containing our ready to eat chicken produced during the affected period. We are working closely with the Foods Standards Agency and will collaborate with their experts to resolve the matter,” the company said in a statement.

“The safety and quality of every product produced by Cranswick is our number one priority and all necessary protocols will be followed and completed before we restart production.”

RASFF Alerts – Animal Feed – Salmonella – Complementary Feed for Dogs – Fish Meal – Lamb Meatballs and Sausage Dog Food – Rapeseed Meal

RASFF

Salmonella spp. in complementary feed for dogs from Germany in Austria

RASFF

Presence of Salmonella Infantis in fish meal from Denmark in Italy

RASFF

Salmonella spp. in lamb meatballs and sausage from Norway in Lithuania and Latvia

RASFF

Salmonella Mbandaka in rapeseed meal from Poland in Lithuania

USA – Patient complaints of illnesses after eating Lucky Charms top 550

Food Safety News

More people have been added to the patient list in an outbreak of “adverse events” linked to dry cereal, according to the FDA.

The agency is now reporting 555 complaints of what it is describing as “adverse events” after eating un unnamed dry cereal. Although the cereal is not identified in the Food and Drug Administration’s outbreak update, a spokesperson has confirmed to Food Safety News that it is investigating complaints about Lucky Charms breakfast cereal.

Ferrero Kinder Factory – hopes to reopen plant linked to Salmonella outbreak in June

Food Safety News

Ferrero’s confectionery plant in Belgium that has been linked to a large Salmonella outbreak could reopen next month.

Belgian authorities stopped production at the facility in Arlon in early April. Meetings have been held between Ferrero officials, a worker’s union and the Federal Agency For the Safety of the Food Chain (FASFC) on what conditions need to be met before production can resume.

Cleaning in the factory is ongoing and any restart is likely to require a test period before products are sent to market to ensure there is no contamination.

Research – France – Cholera

Sante Publique

Food Illness

Digestive poisoning , cholera is a notifiable disease caused by the ingestion of water or food contaminated by Vibrio cholerae bacilli of the toxigenic serogroups O1 and O139.

Cholera: the disease

A rare imported pathology in France

Cholera is an acute digestive poisoning caused by ingestion of water or food contaminated by Vibrio cholerae bacilli of toxigenic serogroups O1 and O139 (cholera vibrios).

Today, collective and individual sanitation and hygiene measures have led to the disappearance of cholera in France (excluding Guyana and Mayotte, where sporadic and limited epidemics were described in the decades 1990-2000 in the two previous decades). In mainland France, cholera, which is subject to mandatory notification , is indeed a rare imported pathology. Symptomatic cases of cholera are mainly linked to the absorption of contaminated drinks or food abroad.

Early reporting of suspected and confirmed cases, and notification of confirmed cases takes place from a single case. They allow the management of imported cholera cases as soon as possible. Between 0 and 2 cases of cholera have been declared each year in France since 2000, they concern travelers returning from endemic areas . This is a small and decreasing number.

Although rare in France, cholera can cause severe digestive symptoms and dehydration. Even if the risks of contamination and epidemic are very limited on French territory, the epidemiological surveillance of Public Health France requires the early notification of cases as soon as this infection is suspected in order to prevent its spread.

Human-to-human and environmental transmission

Man is the main reservoir of cholera. But in some regions, the environment can also play this role, resulting in the circulation of cholera vibrios in an endemic mode . Cholera is linked to the absorption of contaminated water or food. Bacilli , or cholera vibrios, secrete cholera toxin in the intestine, which causes the loss of water and electrolytes (up to 15-20 liters per day). Diarrheal stools released in large quantities spread bacilli in the environment and faecal-oral transmission .

High population concentrations, combined with poor environmental hygiene, favor the appearance and development of cholera epidemics.

Prevention through hygiene and vaccination

When the basic rules of hygiene are respected, the vibrio responsible for cholera is not very transmissible. Appropriate chlorination of water and basic hygiene measures are generally sufficient to prevent contamination.
In the event of a trip to these endemic areas , compliance with hygiene measures (food hygiene with consumption of cooked and hot food, capsulated bottled water, avoidance of ice cubes, and hand washing) remains the best prevention.

There is no active vaccine against Vibrio cholerae serogroup O139. On the other hand, health personnel going to work with patients or in refugee camps during an epidemic can benefit from the anti-cholera vaccine (against different Vibrio cholerae O1 strains and a recombinant cholera toxin B subunit) administered orally (2 doses one week apart for adults and 3 doses one week apart for children 2 to 6 years of age).

Severe intestinal symptoms

The incubation period of cholera is short, from a few hours to five days.

Most people infected with Vibrio cholerae show few or no symptoms, although the bacillus can be found in their stool for one to two weeks. In case of illness, 80 to 90% of episodes are mild or moderately severe and it is then difficult to distinguish them clinically from other types of acute diarrhoea.

Less than 20% of patients develop all the typical symptoms of cholera, with symptoms of moderate to severe dehydration: violent diarrhea profuse with “rice water”, vomiting, without fever.

In the absence of treatment, death occurs in 1 to 3 days, by cardiovascular collapse in 25 to 50% of cases. Mortality is higher in children, the elderly and vulnerable individuals.

The diagnosis of cholera is clinical and biological. It is based on the detection of V. cholerae serogroup O1 or O139 producing cholera toxin in the stools of a patient. In the event of suspected isolation of a strain of cholera vibrio, immediate contact should be made with the National Reference Center for vibrios and cholera for typing and confirmation of the diagnosis: https://www.pasteur.fr/fr/ public-health/cnr/the-cnr/vibrions-cholera

A treatment based on rehydration

The treatment of cholera essentially consists of compensating for the digestive losses of water and electrolytes. Depending on the degree of dehydration, rehydration takes place orally or intravenously. An improvement in the subject’s condition is visible quickly (in a few hours) and healing occurs in a few days. There are no sequels. Antibiotic therapy can be useful in certain severe cases, but multi-resistant strains may appear.

An endemic circulation in South Asia

Cholera is regularly the subject of epidemics in developing countries where it evolves according to the country on an endemic and/or epidemic mode .

The world has been experiencing the seventh cholera pandemic since 1961, caused by Vibrio cholerae serogroup O1 .

Cholera has been endemic in the Indian subcontinent for several centuries. Cholera spread from 1817 to all of Asia, the Middle East and part of Africa, during the first cholera pandemic. Subsequent pandemics also developed from Asia and were facilitated by improved transportation. The seventh pandemic started in Indonesia in 1961, affected Asia in 1962, the Middle East and part of Europe in 1965, Africa in 1970, and South America in 1991.
On the n the island of Hispaniola an epidemic has been ongoing since the emergence of V. cholerae serogroup O1 in 2010 in Haiti.
Today, Africa and Asia are the two areas most affected by cholera. The disease is spreading there. The outbreak declared in Yemen since 2016 is the largest ever documented.

In 1992, a strain of Vibrio cholerae belonging to the new  serogroup O139 appeared in India and Bangladesh. Since then, it has caused epidemics in several Asian countries and could one day be the cause of an eighth pandemic. Cholera is the first disease to have been the subject of international notification (since 1892).

Research – USDA-NIFA grant awarded to Arkansas food scientist to investigate low-moisture food safety

Food Safety News

The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture has awarded an Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station researcher a $200,000 grant to learn more about how much moisture is required to allow bacterial survival in low-moisture foods. 

The institute recognizes the dangers of pathogens in low-moisture foods as just two months ago the FDA confirmed five different strains of Cronobacter sakazakii bacteria at an Abbott Nutrition plant in Sturgis, MI, that makes infant formula that was linked to four illnesses and two deaths.

Jennifer Acuff, the awarded researcher and assistant professor in food safety and microbiology with the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture, says her research will help develop foundational knowledge on how bacteria persist in low-moisture food processing environments.

“We don’t really know how much water or nutrients are required to sustain these contaminating populations, but we know they can persist in the dry environment for a long time,” Acuff said. 

According to Acuff, the goal of the grant is to develop protocols for a laboratory that simulate these persistent bacteria so that they can study how to prevent their formation or mitigate the risks once they do form in a low-moisture food processing environment.

Pakistan – Heatwave, unhygienic food increase risk of seasonal infections

The News

Islamabad: Water and food-borne seasonal infections on the rise in the twin-cities of Rawalpindi and Islamabad as the current intense heatwave that has engulfed many parts of Pakistan has made favourable conditions for such infections to transmit rapidly.

The consumption of unhygienic food and locally made beverages has added to the situation as all the major public and private hospitals in the twin-cities including Holy Family Hospital, District Headquarters Hospital, Benazir Bhutto Hospital, and Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences (PIMS) received a large number of patients with gastroenteritis.

One the major reasons behind the transmission of water-borne infections such as viral hepatitis A&E, and gastroenteritis is the inferno-like temperatures that are hitting the country hard and compelling people to consume more water and locally prepared juices, said Dr Naeem Yousaf.

“My children were also affected with diarrhoea as they went for swimming to beat the heat and unintentionally swallowed contaminated water of the swimming pool,” he added

India – 200 hotels shut in crackdown on stale food after food poisoning death in Kerala

Hindustan Times

A week after a 16-year-old girl died in north Kerala after consuming stale shawarma, the government launched a crackdown on the eateries during which over 200 hotels were shut and large quantity of stale meat and fish was seized in a week-long operation across the state.

“During the drive, over 500 kg stale meat and 6,000 kg fish laced with chemicals was seized in the state,”said a food safety official said, adding, “the checking drive will be intensified.” Last week, the high court had registered a case suo motu and asked the government and food safety officials to conduct regular examinations instead of acting only after a tragedy.