One Health surveillance - cross-sectoral detection, characterisation, and notification of foodborne pathogens.
Frontiers in Public Health
Oglądaj/ Open
Data
2023Autor
Lahti, Elina
Karamehmedovic, Nadja
Riedel, Hilde
Blom, Linnea
Boel, Jeppe
Delibato, Elisabetta
Denis, Martine
van Essen- Zandbergen, Alieda
García-Fernández, Aurora
Hendriksen, Rene
Heydecke, Anna
van Hoek, Angela
Huby, Tom
Kwit, Renata
Lucarelli, Claudia
Lundin, Karl
Michelacci, Valeria
Owczarek, Slawomir
Ring, Isaac
Sejer Kjeldgaard, Jette
Sjogren, Ngegerd
Skóra, Milena
Torpdahl, Mia
Ugarte-Ruiz, María
Veldman, Kees
Ventola, Eleonora
Zając, Magdalena
Jernberg, Cecilia
Metadane
Pokaż pełny rekordStreszczenie
Several Proficiency Test (PT) or External Quality Assessment (EQA) schemes are currently available for assessing the ability of laboratories to detect and characterize enteropathogenic bacteria, but they are usually targeting one sector, covering either public health, food safety or animal health. In addition to sector-specific PTs/EQAs for detection, cross-sectoral panels would be useful for assessment of the capacity to detect and characterize foodborne pathogens in a One Health (OH) perspective and further improving food safety and interpretation of cross-sectoral surveillance data. The aims of the study were to assess the cross-sectoral capability of European public health, animal health and food safety laboratories to detect, characterize and notify findings of the foodborne pathogens Campylobacter spp., Salmonella spp. and Yersinia enterocolitica, and to develop recommendations for future cross-sectoral PTs and EQAs within OH. The PT/EQA scheme developed within this study consisted of a test panel of five samples, designed to represent a theoretical outbreak scenario. A total of 15 laboratories from animal health, public health and food safety sectors were enrolled in eight countries: Denmark, France, Italy, the Netherlands, Poland, Spain, Sweden, and the United Kingdom. The laboratories analyzed the samples according to the methods used in the laboratory and reported the target organisms at species level, and if applicable, serovar for Salmonella and bioserotype for Yersinia. All 15 laboratories analyzed the samples for Salmonella, 13 for Campylobacter and 11 for Yersinia. Analytical errors were predominately false negative results. One sample (S. Stockholm and Y. enterocolitica O:3/BT4) with lower concentrations of target organisms was especially challenging, resulting in six out of seven false negative results. These findings were associated with laboratories using smaller sample sizes and not using enrichment methods. Detection of Salmonella was most commonly mandatory to notify within the three sectors in the eight countries participating in the pilot whereas findings of Campylobacter and Y. enterocolitica were notifiable from human samples, but less commonly from animal and food samples. The results of the pilot PT/EQA conducted in this study confirmed the possibility to apply a cross-sectoral approach for assessment of the joint OH capacity to detect and characterize foodborne pathogens.
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