Title: EMERGING FOODBORNE PATHOGENS
1EMERGING FOODBORNE PATHOGENS
- Prof. Dr. Irfan EROL, DVM, Ph.D. Turkish
Representative of World Vet. Assoc. - Department of Food Hygiene and TechnologySchool
of Veterinary MedicineAnkara University
2- Despite advances in hygiene, consumer knowledge,
food treatment and processing, foodborne diseases
mediated by pathogenic microorganisms or
microbial toxins still represent a significant
treat to public health worldwide.
3- Globally, the WHO has estimated that
approximately 1.5 billion episodes of diarrhea
and more than 3 million deaths occurred in
children under 5 years of age, and a significant
proportion of these results from consumption of
food mainly food of animal origin with microbial
pathogens and toxins
4Emerging Reemerging Zoonotic Diseases
- 60 of the human pathogens are zoonotic
- 75 of emerging zoonotic
5Emerging Foodborne Pathogens
- Definition
- those causing illnesses that have only
recently appeared or been recognised in a
population or that are well recognised but are
rapidly increasing in incidence or geographic
range
6Emerging Foodborne Diseases
- Appeared recently
- Extended to new vehicles of transmission
- Started to increase rapidly in incidence or
geographic range - Been widespread for many years but only recently
identified through new or increased knowledge or
methods of identification and analysis of the
disease agent
7Emerging Foodborne Diseases
- Pose a threat to all persons no matter on age,
sex, lifestyle or socio-economic status etc. - Feel pain and death
- Economic impact
8Emerging Foodborne DiseasesMajor trends
- Changes in environment (technology, climate, etc)
- Mass production and globalisation of food supply
- Economic development
- International travel and trade
- Changing character of the population
- Breakdown in public health
- Lifestyle changes
- Microbial adaptation
9Emerging Foodborne Pathogens
- Bacteria
- Viruses
- Parasites
- Prion
10Emerging foodborne bacteria
- Salmonella (multidrug resistant strain)
- Campylobacter jejuni
- E. coli O157H7
- Listeria monocytogenes
- S. aureus MRSA
- Vibrio vulnificus
- Yersinia enterocolitica
- Arcobacter spp.
- Mycobacterium paratuberculosis
11Emerging foodborne viruses
- Hepatit A and E
- Norovirus
- (Avian influenza, AI)
12Emerging foodborne parasites
- Cryptosporidium parvum
- Cyclospora cayetanensis
- Anisakis spp.
13Foodborne outbreaks 1996 - 2006
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? Cryptosporidiosis, Leptospirosis, Lyme
borreliosis ? Brucellosis, E. coli 0157,
Salmonellosis ? BSE
Reference WHO
14Reference CDC
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18- WHO Surveillance Programme for Control of
Foodborne Infections and Intoxications in Europe
8th Report 1999-2000 Country Reports Turkey
19Pathogen Emerging foodborne diseaeses estimated annually Cases No. of No. of Ilnesses Deaths Emerging foodborne diseaeses estimated annually Cases No. of No. of Ilnesses Deaths Emerging foodborne diseaeses estimated annually Cases No. of No. of Ilnesses Deaths Economic losses from foodborne diseases estimated annualy billion
Campylobacter spp. 1,963,141 10,539 99 1.2
Salmonella non-typhoidal 1,341,873 15,608 553 2.4
E. coli O157H7 62,458 1,843 52 .7
E. coli non-O157-STEC 31,229 921 26 .3
L. monocytogenes 2,493 2,298 499 2.3
Total 3,401,194 31,209 1,229 6.9
Reference USDAs Economic Research Service
CDC
20Some Important Salmonella Outbreaks in the World
Year Country Food Serotype/Phage type No. of cases No. of deaths
1991 Germany Orange cream S.Enteritidis PT4 109 4
1991 Germany Puding (egg) S.Enteritidis 87 10
1994 U.S.A Ice cream S.Enteritidis 224000 -
2003 U.S.A Chicken S. Typhimurium 38 -
2005 Spain Processed chicken S. Hadar 2138 1
2006 Norway Salami S. Kedougou 54 1
2008 IrelandU.K Beef, chicken S. Agona 119 -
21Salmonella serotype distribution in Turkey(Erol
et al., 2009)
- S. Agona
- S. Kentucky Spices
- S. Bredeney
22Some Important Campylobacter Outbreaks in the
World
Year Country Food No. of cases
2000 U.K Wales Raw milk 333
2001-2002 Australia Chicken 601
2005 Denmark Chicken salad 4
2005 Scotland Chicken pate 82
2005-2006 U.S.A Water 32
2007 U.S.A Cheese (from unpasteurized milk) 67
2007 Denmark Water 16
23Campylobacter jejuni
- Quinolone- and fluoroquinolone-resistant
Campylobacter jejuni in the United States,
19822001
24Campylobacter jejuni
25Thermophilic Campylobacter spp. in turkey meat
(n270)(Cakmak and Erol, 2009)
- Thermophilic Camylobacter spp. 123 (45.5)
- C. jejuni 109 (40.3 )
- C. coli 11 ( 4.0 )
- Not typed 3
26Antibiotic resistance profile of C. jejuni
isolates in turkey meat (Cakmak and Erol, 2009)
Antibiotics Resistant Intermediate Sensitive
Azithromycin 104 (95.4) 2 (1.8) 3 (2.7)
Erythromycin 103 (94.4) 0 6 (5.5)
Gentamicin 0 0 109 (100.0)
Chloramphenicol 0 3 (2.7) 106 (97.2)
Nalidixic acid 10 (9.1) 0 99 (90.8)
Ciprofloxacin 19 (17.4) 0 90 (82.5)
Tetracycline 40 (36.6) 2 (1.8) 67 (61.4)
27Some important E. coli O157H7 Outbreaks in the
World
Country Year No of cases(age) Complications Infection source
Japan 1996 gt5499 (students) 12 deaths Alfalfa
U.S.A 1999 321 - Beef
Canada 2000 27 5 deaths Water
Sweden 2002 39 - Fermented sausage
U.S.A 2002 34 5 HUS Ground beef
Netherlands 2005 32 - Steak tartare
U.S.A 2006 376 3 deaths Fresh spinach
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29E. coli O157H7 isolates found in fecal samples
of cattle and sheep at slaughter in Turkey (Erol
et al., 2008)
Sheep Cattle Cattle (male) Cattle (female) Total
Number of samples 218 282 207 75 500
Number of positive samples 14 11 7 4 25
Percent () 6.42 3.90 3.38 5.33 5.00
30Positive Negative Total
stx1 7 4 11
stx2 9 2 11
eaeA 11 - 11
hly 11 - 11
H7 11 - 11
Toxin profiles of E. coli O157H7 isolated in
Turkey (Erol et al., 2008)
31Toxin profiles of 11 E. coli O157H7 isolates
within the PFGE groups in cattle in Turkey (Erol
et al., 2008)
PFGE groups N Toxin profiles
A 1 stx2
B 2 stx2
C 1 stx1 and stx2
D 4 stx1 and stx2
D 2 stx1
D 1 stx2
32Some Important Listeria outbreaks in the World
Country Year Food Serotype No. of cases No. of deaths
U.S.A. 1998 Turkey products 4b 108 18
Finland 1998 Butter 3a 25 24
France 2000 Pork meat 4b 32 31
U.S.A. 2000 Turkey products 1/2a 30 7
U.S.A. 2002 Turkey products - 54 11
U.S.A. 2003 Mexican cheese 4b 12 2
Switzerland 2005 Soft cheese - 11 2
Norway 2007 Cheese - 12 2
Canada 2008 Red meat - 53 20
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34- Contamination level of turkey meat with
- L. monocytogenes is 17.8 (32/180)
- (Ayaz and Erol 2008)
35L. monocytogenes serotype distribution
- 44.9 1/2a
- 37.2 4b
- 9.0 1/2b
- 9.0 1/2c
36Antibiotic resistance profiles of L.
monocytogenes in turkey meat (n24) (Ayaz and
Erol, 2008)
Antibiotics Resistant () Intermediate () Sensitive ()
Ampicillin 18 (75.0) - 6 (25.0)
Chloramphenicol - - 24 (100)
Erythromycin - 9 (37.5) 15 (62.5)
Gentamicin - - 24 (100)
Penicillin 20 (83.3) - 4 (16.7)
Streptomycin - 8 (33.3) 16 (66.7)
Tetracycline - - 24 (100)
Vancomycin - - 24 (100)
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38Occurrence of Cryptosporidium spp. oocysts in
Turkey(Kursun and Erol, 2003)
Surface water Sewage water treatment at slaughterhouse Ent. Exist. Slaughtered Cattle Sheep
Number of samples 24 13 13 60 60
Number of positive samples 24 13 13 23 4
Percent () 100 100 100 38.3 6.6
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41Antibiotic resistance
- Its a global concern of the antibiotic
resistance of major foodborne pathogens such as - Salmonella Typhimurium DT 104
- Campylobacter spp.
- Listeria monocytogenes
- E. coli O157H7
- Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA)
- Enterococcus (VRE)
42Foodborne InfectionsIntoxications Known/ Unknown
Reported Positive Isolates
Lab. Confirmed Cases
Suspectible Cases
Hospitalised No sample taken
Unnotified Cases
No medical intervention
43Farm to table main contamination points
44- Surveillance
- Risk management Epidemiologi
cal evaluation / - Risk assessment
- Research
45Control of Foodborne Disease
- From farm to table approach
- Implementation of GMP and HACCP
46Public Health Approach
- Public health system
- Surveillance
- Epidemiology for earlier diagnosis
- Early response to outbreaks
- Provide to disease patterns changing
- Public health lab. support for rapid and accurate
diagnosis - Rapid communication links
- Communication to public
- Education on prevention and/or detection
47THANK YOU
E-mail erol_at_veterinary.ankara.edu.tr
48Factors contributing to the global incidence of
foodborne disease
- Poor sanitary conditions
- Malnutrition
- Changing demographics (increasing population of
infants, elderly) - Inadequate public health infrastructure
- Inadequate hygienic and technological conditions
of food production - Inadequate cooking, reheating and storage
conditions - Increasing tourism and international trade
- Increasing animal movement and insufficient
control of borders - Increasing international trade of animal and food
- Inadequate legislation and official control
system - Emerging/reemerging foodborne pathogens
- Acquisition of virulence and antibiotic genes by
nonpathogenic bacteria - Adaptation and enhanced survival of pathogens in
food - Inadequate consumer education
49Trichinellosisoutbreak in Turkey
- Although there is a religious restriction on pork
meat consumption, in January 2004 there was a big
trichinellosis outbreak occurred by consuming çig
köfte (raw ground meat ball-traditional food) in
Izmir - 542 people were affected and samples were found
to be contaminated with T. britovi
50One World One Health (OWOH)
- The medical and veterinary professions have a
common interest in many diseases, primarily
zoonotic diseases such as BSE, SARS and, most
recently, Avian Influenza (H5N1), have
highlighted the need for interprofessional
collaboration not just locally and nationally,
but on a global scale.
51One World One Health (OWOH)
- Improving animal and human health globally
through collaboration among all the health
sciences, especially between the veterinary and
human medical professions to address critical
needs.