Tuesday, February 10, 2015

Researchers caution public about supermarket deli meats

Researchers at Purdue University have found persistent presence of Listeria monocytogenes food-poisoning bacteria in the deli meat departments of 30 major supermarkets in three states.

Their findings prompt them to caution consumers, especially elderly people with weaker immune systems and those undergoing cancer treatments that compromise immune systems, to steer clear of the deli department meats.

Not all supermarket chains had a problem, but in some that did, Listeria showed up every time for three sets of sampling and testing.

The research team says this indicates that standard cleaning procedures in retail delis may not eradicate Listeria monocytogenes bacteria, which can cause a potentially fatal disease in people with vulnerable immune systems.

A study led by Haley Oliver, assistant professor of food science, found that 6.8 percent of samples taken in 15 delis before daily operation had begun tested positive for the food-poisoning bacteria.

In a second sampling phase, 9.5 percent of samples taken in 30 delis during operation over six months tested positive for the bacteria.

In 12 delis, the same subtypes of the bacteria cropped up in several of the monthly samplings, which could mean that L. monocytogenes can persist in growth niches over time.

"This is a public health challenge," Oliver said.

"These data suggest that failure to thoroughly execute cleaning and sanitation protocols is allowing L. monocytogenes to persist in some stores. We can't in good conscience tell people with weak immune systems that it is safe to eat at the deli."

In healthy individuals, eating food contaminated with L. monocytogenes may lead to common food poisoning symptoms such as diarrhea or an upset stomach.

But the bacteria can cause listeriosis - a serious systemic infection - in immunocompromised people such as the elderly, infants and children, pregnant women and people with HIV.

In severe cases, L. monocytogenes can pass through the intestinal membrane and into the bloodstream or cross the blood-brain barrier. The bacteria can also cross the placental barrier in pregnant women, which can trigger abortion.

This is the bacteria that resulted in 22 deaths among consumers of processed meats from a Toronto processing plant run by Maple Leaf Foods Inc.

Ready-to-eat deli meats are the food most associated with L. monocytogenes, which, unlike Salmoneall and E. coli, can grow at refrigerator temperatures.

“Stringent control measures and inspections have tamped down the presence of L. monocytogenes at meat processing plants, but there are no regulations specific to Listeria for retail delis, the researchers say.

Recent risk assessments suggest that up to 83 percent of listeriosis cases linked to deli meats are attributable to products contaminated at retail.

"It's kind of the Wild West," Oliver said.

"Manufacturing has a zero-tolerance policy for Listeria, but that dissipates at the retail level.

“The challenge of developing systematic cleaning procedures for a wide variety of delis - which are less restricted environments than processing plants - can make Listeria harder to control," he said.


Oliver and her team collected and tested swabs of surfaces that come into frequent contact with food, such as meat slicers and counters, and surfaces that typically do not.