Seasonal prevalence and characterization of Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli on pork carcasses at three steps of the harvest process at two commercial processing plants in the US.

2020 
Shiga toxin (stx) -producing Escherichia coli (STEC) are foodborne pathogens that have a significant impact on public health, with those possessing the attachment factor intimin (eae) referred to as enterohemorrhagic E. coli (EHEC) and associated with life threatening illnesses. Cattle and beef are considered typical sources of STEC, but their presence in pork products is a growing concern. Therefore, carcasses (n=1536) at two U.S. pork processors were sampled once per season at three stages of harvest (post-stunning skins; post-scald carcasses; chilled carcasses) then examined using PCR for stx and eae, aerobic plate count (APC) and Enterobacteriaceae counts (EBC). The prevalence of stx on skins, post-scald, and chilled carcasses was 85.3, 17.5, and 5.4%, respectively, with 82.3, 7.8, and 1.7% swabs, respectively, having stx and eae present. All stx positive samples were subjected to culture isolation that resulted in 368 STEC and 46 EHEC isolates. The most frequently identified STEC were serogroups O121, O8, and O91 (63, 6.7, and 6.0% of total STEC, respectively). The most frequently isolated EHEC was serotype O157:H7 (63% of total EHEC). Results showed that scalding significantly reduced (P 75%) cases of severe illnesses caused by STEC and are considered adulterants of beef. However, some STEC outbreaks have been attributed to pork products although the same E. coli are not considered adulterants in pork because little is known of their prevalence along the pork chain. The significance of the work presented here is that it identifies disease causing STEC, enterohemorrhagic E. coli (EHEC), demonstrating that these same organisms are a food safety hazard in pork as well as beef. The results show that most STEC isolated from pork are not likely to cause severe disease in humans and that processes used in pork harvest, such as scalding, offer a significant control point to reduce contamination. The results will assist the pork processing industry and regulatory agencies to optimize interventions to improve the safety of pork products.
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