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Monitoring and preventing foodborne outbreaks: are we missing wastewater as a key data source?

Authors :
Fulvia Troja
Valentina Indio
Federica Savini
Alessandro Seguino
Andrea Serraino
Alessandro Fuschi
Daniel Remondini
Alessandra De Cesare
Source :
Italian Journal of Food Safety (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
PAGEPress Publications, 2024.

Abstract

In 2022, the number of foodborne outbreaks in Europe increased by 43.9%, highlighting the need to improve surveillance systems and design outbreak predictive tools. This review aims to assess the scientific literature describing wastewater surveillance to monitor foodborne pathogens in association with clinical data. In the selected studies, the relationship between peaks of pathogen concentration in wastewater and reported clinical cases is described. Moreover, details on analytical methods to detect and quantify pathogens as well as wastewater sampling procedures are discussed. Few papers show a statistically significant correlation between high concentrations of foodborne pathogens in wastewater and the occurrence of clinical cases. However, monitoring pathogen concentration in wastewater looks like a promising and cost-effective strategy to improve foodborne outbreak surveillance. Such a strategy can be articulated in three steps, where the first one is testing wastewater with an untargeted method, like shotgun metagenomic, to detect microorganisms belonging to different domains. The second consists of testing wastewater with a targeted method, such as quantitative polymerase chain reaction, to quantify those specific pathogens that in the metagenomic dataset display an increasing trend or exceed baseline concentration thresholds. The third involves the integrated wastewater and clinical data analysis and modeling to find meaningful epidemiological correlations and make predictions.

Details

Language :
English, Italian
ISSN :
22397132
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Italian Journal of Food Safety
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.14e05004a70840ecb2717ce1e7d3ff2c
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.4081/ijfs.2024.12725