Abstracts: Quantitative assessment of human and pet exposure to Salmonella associated with dry pet foods

Recent Salmonella outbreaks associated with dry pet foods and treats highlight the importance of these foods as previously overlooked exposure vehicles for both pets and humans.

In the last decade efforts have been made to raise the safety of this class of products, for instance by upgrading production equipment, cleaning protocols, and finished product testing. However, no comprehensive or quantitative risk profile is available for pet foods, thus limiting the ability to establish safety standards and assess the effectiveness of current and proposed Salmonella control measures.

This study sought to develop an ingredients-to- consumer quantitative microbial exposure assessment model to: 1) estimate pet and human exposure to Salmonella via dry pet food, and 2) assess the impact of industry and household-level mitigation strategies on exposure.

Data on prevalence and concentration of Salmonella in pet food ingredients, production process parameters, bacterial ecology, and contact transfer in the household were obtained through literature review, industry data, and targeted research. A probabilistic Monte Carlo modeling framework was developed to simulate the production process and basic household exposure routes. Under the range of assumptions adopted in this model, human exposure due to handling pet food is null to minimal if contamination occurs exclusively before extrusion. Exposure increases considerably if recontamination occurs post-extrusion during coating with fat, although mean ingested doses remain modest even at high fat contamination levels, due to the low percent of fat in the finished product.

Exposure is highly variable, with the distribution of doses ingested by adult pet owners spanning 3 Log CFU per exposure event. Child exposure due to ingestion of 1 g of pet food leads to significantly higher doses than adult doses associated with handling the food. Recontamination after extrusion and coating, e.g., via dust or equipment surfaces, may also lead to exposure due to the absence of pathogen reduction steps after extrusion or at consumer households. Exposure is potentially highest when Salmonella is transferred to human food that is left at growth-promoting conditions.

This model can be applied to evaluate the impact of alternative Salmonella control measures during production, risk communication to consumers, and regulatory standards.

The study is from the Department of Nutrition and Food Science, the Center for Food Safety and Security Systems, and the Joint Institute for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland, USA; Mars Petcare US, Franklin, Tennessee, USA, and the Mars Global Food Safety Center, Yanqi Economic Development Zone, Huairou, Beijing, People’s Republic of China.

Lambertini E, Buchanan R L, Narrod C, et al. International Journal Of Food Microbiology 2016; 216: 79-90; doi: 10.1016/j.ijfoodmicro.2015.09.005.

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