Quantitative risk assessment model to investigate the public health impact of varying Listeria monocytogenes allowable levels in different food commodities: A retrospective analysis

Fernando Sampedro, Fernando Pérez-Rodríguez, Joseph L. Servadio, Sanjay Gummalla, Craig W. Hedberg

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9 Scopus citations

Abstract

Invasive listeriosis is a potentially fatal foodborne disease that according to this study may affect up to 32.9 % of the US population considered as increased risk and including people with underlying conditions and co-morbidities. Listeria monocytogenes has been scrutinized in research and surveillance programs worldwide in Ready-to-Eat (RTE) food commodities (RTE salads, deli meats, soft/semi-soft cheese, seafood) and frozen vegetables in the last 30 years with an estimated overall prevalence of 1.4–9.9 % worldwide (WD) and 0.5–3.8 % in the United States (US). Current L. monocytogenes control efforts have led to a prevalence reduction in the last 5 years of 4.9–62.9 % (WD) and 12.4–92.7 % (US). A quantitative risk assessment model was developed, estimating the probability of infection in the US susceptible population to be 10–10,000× higher than general population and the total number of estimated cases in the US was 1044 and 2089 cases by using the FAO/WHO and Pouillot dose-response models. Most cases were attributed to deli meats (>90 % of cases) followed by RTE salads (3.9–4.5 %), soft and semi-soft cheese and RTE seafood (0.5–1.0 %) and frozen vegetables (0.2–0.3 %). Cases attributed to the increased risk population corresponded to 96.6–98.0 % of the total cases with the highly susceptible population responsible for 46.9–80.1 % of the cases. Removing product lots with a concentration higher than 1 CFU/g reduced the prevalence of contamination by 15.7–88.3 % and number of cases by 55.9–100 %. Introducing lot-by-lot testing and defining allowable quantitative regulatory limits for low-risk RTE commodities may reduce the public health impact of L. monocytogenes and improve the availability of enumeration data.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number109932
JournalInternational Journal of Food Microbiology
Volume383
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 16 2022

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
The authors declare the following financial interests/personal relationships which may be considered as potential competing interests: Craig Hedberg reports financial support was provided by Frozen Food Foundation . Fernando Sampedro reports financial support was provided by Frozen Food Foundation. Craig Hedberg reports financial support was provided by Seafood Industry Research Fund . Fernando Sampedro reports financial support was provided by Seafood Industry Research Fund. Sanjay Gummalla reports a relationship with American Frozen Food Institute that includes: employment.

Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 The Authors

Keywords

  • Food safety
  • Listeriosis
  • RTE
  • Regulatory limits
  • Risk management
  • Susceptible population

PubMed: MeSH publication types

  • Journal Article

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