Frontiers in Public Health (Jan 2023)

First cross-border outbreak of foodborne botulism in the European Union associated with the consumption of commercial dried roach (Rutilus rutilus)

  • David Hendrickx,
  • David Hendrickx,
  • Carmen Varela Martínez,
  • Carmen Varela Martínez,
  • Matthias Contzen,
  • Christiane Wagner-Wiening,
  • Karl-Heinz Janke,
  • Pablo Hernando Jiménez,
  • Susanne Massing,
  • Jeanette Pichler,
  • Petra Tichaczek-Dischinger,
  • Florian Burckhardt,
  • Klaus Stark,
  • Katharina Katz,
  • Annette Jurke,
  • Sebastian Thole,
  • Rosa Carbó,
  • Mariam Pascual del Pobil Ferré,
  • Milagros Nieto,
  • María Jesús Zamora,
  • Ana Sisó,
  • Pilar Pallares García,
  • Sylvia Valdezate,
  • Lars Schaade,
  • Sylvia Worbs,
  • Brigitte Gertrud Dorner,
  • Christina Frank,
  • Martin Bernhard Dorner

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2022.1039770
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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Botulism outbreaks due to commercial products are extremely rare in the European Union. Here we report on the first international outbreak of foodborne botulism caused by commercial salt-cured, dried roach (Rutilus rutilus). Between November and December 2016, an outbreak of six foodborne botulism type E cases from five unrelated households was documented in Germany and Spain. The outbreak involved persons of Russian and Kazakh backgrounds, all consumed unheated salt-cured, dried roach—a snack particularly favored in Easter-European countries. The implicated food batches had been distributed by an international wholesaler and were recalled from Europe-wide outlets of a supermarket chain and other independent retailers. Of interest, and very unlike to other foodborne disease outbreaks which usually involves a single strain or virus variant, different Clostridium botulinum strains and toxin variants could be identified even from a single patient's sample. Foodborne botulism is a rare but potentially life-threatening disease and almost exclusively involves home-made or artisan products and thus, outbreaks are limited to individual or few cases. As a consequence, international outbreaks are the absolute exception and this is the first one within the European Union. Additional cases were likely prevented by a broad product recall, underscoring the importance of timely public health action. Challenges and difficulties on the diagnostic and epidemiological level encountered in the outbreak are highlighted.

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