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PROJECT INTRODUCTION AND LISTERIA SUMMARY. Control of Listeria monocytogenes in Seafood Processing Environments. National Food Safety Initiative Project Funded by: Cooperative State Research, Education and Extension Service of USDA under Agreement No. 00-51110-9769 .
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PROJECT INTRODUCTION AND LISTERIA SUMMARY
Control of Listeria monocytogenes in Seafood Processing Environments National Food Safety Initiative Project Funded by: Cooperative State Research, Education and Extension Service of USDA under Agreement No. 00-51110-9769
Principal Investigators: Martin Wiedmann– Cornell Food Science Dept. Ken Gall – New York Sea Grant Project Collaborators: Jenny Scott – National Food Processors Assoc. Bob Collette – National Fisheries Institute Doris Hicks – University of Delaware Tom Rippen – University of Maryland Mike Moody & Jon Bell – Louisiana State U. George Flick – Virginia Tech
Project Goal: To understand sources and spread of Listeria monocytogenes in ready-to-eat (RTE) seafood processing facilities and to develop intervention strategies that can be implemented by industry.
Listeria monocytogenes • Listeria monocytogenes (Lm) is a bacterium that can cause foodborne disease (listeriosis) in humans • Listeriosis predominantly affects the elderly, people with weak immune systems, and pregnant women and newborns.
Soil Vegetation Silage Water Sewage Fecal Material Lm is widespread in the environment Fenlon in Ryser & Marth, 1999
Lm can be isolated from a variety of animals: Sheep, cattle, goats, pigs, chickens, turkeys, pheasants, fish, crustaceans, mice, rats, rabbits, dogs, cats, deer, pigeons, parrots, frogs, insects, etc. Wesley inRyser & Marth, 1999
Lm has been isolated from a wide variety of foods: Dairy Products: cheeses, ice cream Meats: sausages, ham, paté Poultry: chicken, turkey Vegetables: potatoes, radishes, salad mixes Seafood: crab, shrimp, salmon, trout Farber &Peterkin, 1991; Ryser & Marth, 1999
Lm has been isolated from food plant environments • Condensate • Conveyors • Slicers, etc. • Mops, sponges • Floors • Drains • HVAC • Coolers Bernard & Sveum, 1994; Gravani in Ryser & Marth, 1999
Lm has been isolated from the home environment • Kitchen environment • Dish cloths, brushes • Refrigerators • Sinks • Toothbrushes Cox et al., 1989; Sergelidis et al., 1997; Beumer & te Giffel, 1998
Lm has been isolated from the retail environment • Deli foods • Retail refrigerators • Meat slicers Humphrey and Worthington, 1990; Salvat et al. , 1995; Sergelidis et al., 1997.
Lm can be isolated from the intestinal tract of humans:0.8-21% of normal, healthy humans. Slutsker & Schuchat in Ryser & Marth 1999
Scenario No. 1:The Isolated Case • An individual case of listeriosis with no apparent link to others. • The conditions leading to isolated cases are varied and often uncertain or unknown. • Some may be part of a cluster or outbreak that was not detected. Source: Tompkin, R.B. (2002) J. Food Prot. 65:709-725
Scenario No. 2: Cases Linked by a Single Lot of Food • One lot of contaminated food that leads to a cluster of cases. • One or more food handling errors may be involved. • The outbreak ceases when the lot of food is no longer available. Source: Tompkin, R.B. (2002) J. Food Prot. 65:709-725
Scenario 3: Clusters or outbreaks involving multiple lots of food from a single source • Cases may be scattered by time and location. • An unusually virulent strain of Lm has become established in a food operation. • Multiple lots of food are contaminated over time. • The food supports the growth of Lm. Source: Tompkin, R.B. (2002) J. Food Prot. 65:709-725
Industry Priorities 1. Prevent conditions that lead to extended outbreaks (scenario 3). 2. Control conditions to minimize the risk of isolated cases and clusters (scenarios 1 and 2). 3. Control conditions to satisfy regulatory requirements.
Consequences of Lm in Foods - Listeriosis • normal individuals?? • pregnant women • neonates • the elderly • immunosuppressed individuals
Foodborne Listeriosis • 2500 cases (estimated) • 90% are hospitalized • 500 deaths (20% of cases) CDC, 1999
FDA Recalls 17 in 1999, 34 in 2000, 34 in 2001 sandwiches, cheeses (hard and soft), sliced apples, platter w/ red bell peppers, red bell peppers, seafood (smoked, salads, dip), ice cream, cut salads, sprouts, coleslaw, hummus, cucumber garlic sauce
USDA Recalls 31/62 (50%) in 1999 35/76 (46%) in 2000 22/87 (25%) in 2001 sausages, chicken nuggets, hot dogs, roast beef, corned beef, ham, bologna, enchiladas, burritos, fajitas, chicken salad, chicken wings, roast duckling, duck breast, jerky
Recent Seafood Recalls • Smoked trout – Eden Brook Fish Market, NY, 7/02 • Other Smoked Fish products, • Majority of seafood recalls • Langostino tails – Trader Joe’s, East and Midwest, January 2001 • Smoked whitefish salad – Hommarus/Marshall Smoked Fish, Inc., December 2000 • Seafood Salad – Ittella Foods, CA, October 2000
Warning Letters • Pacific Seafood Group, Newport, Oregon, July 01- Frozen shrimp adulterated with LM
Listeriosis from seafood • Shrimp (?) – 1989, CT, 10 cases • Mussels – 1991, Australia, 4 cases • Mussels – 1992, New Zealand, 3 cases • Gravad (raw marinated) or cold-smoked rainbow trout – 1994-95, Sweden, 9 cases • Cold-smoked rainbow trout – 1998, Finland, 5 cases
Case Study: Sara Lee, 12/98 • Recall of 15 million pounds of deli meats and hot dogs due to LM contamination • 101 listeriosis cases and 21 deaths • $1.6 million settlement on 5 individual wrongful death claims in Cook County • Settlement of class action lawsuit - $5 million (?)
Sara Lee (continued) • Pleaded guilty June 22, 2001 to misdemeanor charge of selling contaminated meat • Paid maximum fine of $200,000 • Agreed to spend $3 million on food safety research at Michigan State University
Listeriosis Outbreak 2002 53 illnesses, 11 deaths July-Oct Turkey deli meat implicated • Pilgrim’s Pride/Wampler Recall of 27 million pounds of fresh and frozen RTE turkey and chicken products due to possible LM contamination – outbreak strain in plant • Jack Lambersky Poultry • Recall of 200,000 pounds of RTE poultry products outbreak strain found in product
Draft Assessment of the Relative Riskto Public Health from Foodborne Listeria monocytogenes Among Selected Categories of Ready-to-Eat Foods 1/19/01
FDA/FSIS Risk Assessment Highest relative risk per serving: • Pâté, meat spreads • Fresh soft cheese • Smoked seafood (Intermediate Age Group)
Survey of LM in Ready-to-Eat Foods, 2003. • Many Products collected and tested • Including • Seafood Salads (other than tuna) • Smoked Seafood • Crawfish tail meat NOT tested • Gombas, DE, et al. (2003) J. Food Protection
Survey of LM in Ready-to-Eat Foods, 2003. • Summary of Findings • Smoked Seafood and Seafood Salads • High LM incidence or occurrence • Amount of LM bacteria per occurrence could also be high • Smoked seafood and seafood salad products are a concern for LM occurrence and risk
U.S. Policy “Zero Tolerance” None detected in a 25g sample of a ready-to-eat food
Reduction of Listeriosis The US has a public health goal to reduce the incidence of listeriosis in half by 2005.
“Outbreak” Foods • Refrigerated foods • Long shelf-life • Supports growth to high numbers
Many RTE Seafoods • Refrigerated foods • Long shelf-life • Supports growth to high numbers
Summary • Smoked seafood has all the characteristics of a “high risk” food with respect to listeriosis • Smoked seafood & seafood salads appear to have a higher prevalence of LM than many RTE foods • FDA has concerns about LM in all RTE foods, including crawfish – expect more regulatory action in the future • Recalls are expensive • Making someone sick is more expensive
Conclusion Understanding the risk and control of LM in processing plants and final products is critical for the crawfish tail meat industry