Cucumbers fingered again linked to foodborne microsporidia in Sweden

Posted: January 26th, 2012 - 7:26pm by Doug Powell

When a strain of shiga toxin producing E. coli (VTEC O8:H19) was found in Spanish cucumbers in May 2011 during the Germany-based sprout outbreak that killed 53 – and subsequently proven to not be the outbreak strain – producers and politicians focused on how public health got it wrong, and demands for compensation.

Shouldn’t it have been worrisome that any shiga-toxin producing E. coli was found at retail, in a cucumber?

Researchers in Sweden are now reporting that microsporidia may be an underreported source of foodborne illness after cucumbers were linked to dozens of sick people visiting a hotel in Sweden. Abstract below.

Microsporidia are spore-forming intracellular parasites that infrequently cause disease in immunocompetent persons. This study describes the first report of a foodborne microsporidiosis outbreak which affected persons visiting a hotel in Sweden.

Enterocytozoon bieneusi was identified in stool samples from 7/11 case-patients, all six sequenced samples were genotype C. To confirm that this was not a chance finding, 19 stool samples submitted by healthy persons from a comparable group who did not visit the hotel on that day were tested; all were negative for microsporidia. A retrospective cohort study identified 135 case-patients (attack rate 30%). The median incubation period was 9 days.

Consumption of cheese sandwiches [relative risk (RR) 4·1, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1·4–12·2] and salad (RR 2·1, 95% CI 1·1–4) were associated with illness. Both items contained pre-washed, ready-to-eat cucumber slices.

Microsporidia may be an under-reported cause of gastrointestinal outbreaks; we recommend that microsporidia be explored as potential causative agents in food- and waterborne outbreaks, especially when no other organisms are identified.

Epidemiology and Infection March 2012, 140:519-527

V. Decraene, M. Lebbad, S. Botero-Kleiven, A.-M. Gustavsson and M. Lofdahl

 

 

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Comments

Kaarin Goodburn says:

Er, the non-outbreak strain of VTEC found on the organic Spanish cucumber reported in RASFF 2011.0703 was VTEC O8:H19, not O104. Of course it still should not have been there! Massive rainfall in the growing area in late April behind the issue? As you say, keep poop off food!

Posted on January 27th, 2012 - 9:02am

Doug Powell says:

 thanks for the clarification; should have caught that

 

Posted on January 27th, 2012 - 11:26am

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