Emerging Microbes and Infections (Jan 2020)

Backtracking and forward checking of human listeriosis clusters identified a multiclonal outbreak linked to Listeria monocytogenes in meat products of a single producer

  • Stefanie Lüth,
  • Sven Halbedel,
  • Bettina Rosner,
  • Hendrik Wilking,
  • Alexandra Holzer,
  • Alice Roedel,
  • Ralf Dieckmann,
  • Szilvia Vincze,
  • Rita Prager,
  • Antje Flieger,
  • Sascha Al Dahouk,
  • Sylvia Kleta

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/22221751.2020.1784044
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1
pp. 1600 – 1608

Abstract

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ABSTRACTDue to its high case fatality rate, foodborne listeriosis is considered a major public health concern worldwide. We describe one of the largest listeriosis outbreaks in Germany with 83 cases of invasive listeriosis between 2013 and 2018. As part of the outbreak investigation, we identified a highly diverse Listeria monocytogenes population at a single producer of ready-to-eat meat products. Strikingly, the extensive sampling after identification of a first match between a cluster of clinical isolates and a food isolate allowed for a linkage between this producer and a second, previously unmatched cluster of clinical isolates. Bacterial persistence in the processing plant and indications of cross-contamination events explained long-term contamination of food that led to the protracted outbreak. Based on screening for virulence factors, a pathogenic phenotype could not be ruled out for other strains circulating in the plant, suggesting that the outbreak could have been even larger. As most isolates were sensitive to common biocides used in the plant, hard to clean niches in the production line may have played a major role in the consolidation of the contamination. Our study demonstrates how important it is to search for the origin of infection when cases of illness have occurred (backtracking), but also clearly highlights that it is equally important to check whether a contamination at food or production level has caused disease (forward checking). Only through this two-sided control strategy, foodborne disease outbreaks such as listeriosis can be minimized, which could be a real improvement for public health.

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