Abstract
In this
study is presented a procedure for surveillance data-driven risk
assessment, which can be used to inform inter-sectorial Campylobacter risk-based control, e.g. within National Action Plans and One Health (OH) systems. Campylobacter
surveillance data (2019 to 2022) and a published quantitative microbial
risk assessment (QMRA) model were used, to show the procedure.
Moreover, an interface tool was developed in Excel for showing
descriptive statistics on measured apparent flock prevalence (AP) and
concentrations (colony forming units per gram, cfu/g) on the meat,
together with their related QMRA outputs. Currently (mid-2024), Danish
fresh broiler meat is produced by four slaughterhouse companies (A, B, C
and D), where approximately 30 % of the annually slaughtered broiler
flocks are randomly culture tested, on one leg skin (LS) sample per
flock sampled from chilled carcasses. Data variables were: date of
sampling, farm-ID, within farm house-ID, flock-ID, slaughterhouse name,
sample-ID, and Campylobacter concentrations. Flocks were
classified as carcass positive with a concentration ≥ 10 cfu/g. The data
was fed into the QMRA model to assess: a) the average risk of human
campylobacteriosis per serving (during a month or year), and b) the
monthly/annual risk of 2022 relative (RR) to the baseline (average) risk
from the previous three years. The descriptive statistics and the risk
assessment (RA) were carried out at national level and for each
slaughterhouse. In 2022, the national RR was 1.03, implying that the
average annual risk increased by approximately 3 % compared to the
baseline. Nevertheless, for slaughterhouses A, B and D, the annual risk
decreased by ≈ 22 %, 21 % and 43 %, respectively; whereas for
slaughterhouse C it increased by 48 %. Monthly risk estimates showed
seasonal variations, according to the visualized changes of AP and meat
contaminations. The national monthly RR was >1 in July and from
September to December. During those months: slaughterhouse C had always
RR > 1, slaughterhouse A had a relative increase of risk in July,
slaughterhouse B in July and November, and slaughterhouse D in October
and December. The procedure and the tools used in this study, allow
identifying the impact of seasonality and food-chain stages (i.e.
slaughterhouses and their broilers sourcing farms) on the risk per
serving, so that Campylobacter risk-based control could be
implemented accordingly, from farm to fork, across consecutive
surveillance periods. The same principles could be applied in other
countries, food chains, and/or for other foodborne pathogens, when
similar data and QMRA models are available.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 100322 |
Journal | Microbial Risk Analysis |
Volume | 27-28 |
Number of pages | 10 |
ISSN | 2352-3522 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 2024 |
Keywords
- Surveillance data
- Risk communication
- Food chain
- Broiler meat
- Risk management