| Literature DB >> 28494842 |
Anika Schielke1,2,3, Wolfgang Rabsch1, Rita Prager1, Sandra Simon1, Angelika Fruth1, Rüdiger Helling4, Martin Schnabel4, Claudia Siffczyk5, Sina Wieczorek5, Sabine Schroeder6, Beate Ahrens6, Hanna Oppermann7, Stefan Pfeiffer8, Sophie Susann Merbecks9, Bettina Rosner1, Christina Frank1, Armin A Weiser10, Petra Luber11, Andreas Gilsdorf1, Klaus Stark1, Dirk Werber1,12.
Abstract
In 2013, raw pork was the suspected vehicle of a large outbreak (n = 203 cases) of Salmonella Muenchen in the German federal state of Saxony. In 2014, we investigated an outbreak (n = 247 cases) caused by the same serovar affecting Saxony and three further federal states in the eastern part of Germany. Evidence from epidemiological, microbiological and trace-back investigations strongly implicated different raw pork products as outbreak vehicles. Trace-back analysis of S. Muenchen-contaminated raw pork sausages narrowed the possible source down to 54 pig farms, and S. Muenchen was detected in three of them, which traded animals with each other. One of these farms had already been the suspected source of the 2013 outbreak. S. Muenchen isolates from stool of patients in 2013 and 2014 as well as from food and environmental surface swabs of the three pig farms shared indistinguishable pulsed-field gel electrophoresis patterns. Our results indicate a common source of both outbreaks in the primary production of pigs. Current European regulations do not make provisions for Salmonella control measures on pig farms that have been involved in human disease outbreaks. In order to prevent future outbreaks, legislators should consider tightening regulations for Salmonella control in causative primary production settings. This article is copyright of The Authors, 2017.Entities:
Keywords: Salmonella; food-borne infections; outbreaks; pig; pork; tracing
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28494842 PMCID: PMC5434879 DOI: 10.2807/1560-7917.ES.2017.22.18.30528
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Euro Surveill ISSN: 1025-496X
Figure 1Number of notified salmonellosis cases with reported serotype in Germany, 2001–2014
Figure 2Reported incidence of salmonellosis per district (number of outbreak cases/100,000 population) in four federal states affected by an outbreak, eastern Germany, May–August 2014 (n = 247 cases)
Figure 3Reported cases with Salmonella Muenchen and known date of symptom onset, Germany, 26 May–3 August 2014 (n = 217 cases)
Figure 4Schematic overview of the pork food production chain ‘from farm to fork’