Role of Foods in Sporadic Listeriosis: II. Microbilogic and Epidemiologic Investigation

1992 
Objective. —To evaluate the role of foods in sporadic listeriosis. Design. —Microbiologic survey of foods collected from refrigerators of patients with listeriosis identified through active laboratory-based surveillance. Patient and food Listeria monocytogenes isolates were subtyped to identify foods contaminated with the same strain of L monocytogenes that caused illness in the patient; samples of these foods were obtained from the retail source. Setting. —Multistate population-based study conducted between 1988 and 1990. Results. — Listeria monocytogenes grew from at least one food specimen in the refrigerators of 79 (64%) of 123 listeriosis patients; 11% of more than 2000 food specimens collected in the study contained L monocytogenes . Twenty-six (33%) of 79 refrigerators with foods that grew L monocytogenes contained at least one food isolate of the same strain as that in the corresponding patient, a frequency much higher than would be expected by chance ( P L monocytogenes , foods that were ready-to-eat, foods that grew L monocytogenes by a direct-plating method (a measure of the level of contamination), and foods that contained serotype 4b isolates were independently associated with an increased likelihood of containing the patient-matching strain. Conclusion. —We identified specific food and L monocytogenes isolate characteristics—ready-to-eat foods, foods containing higher concentrations of L monocytogenes , and foods containing serotype 4b—which were associated with disease-causing strains. These results can provide guidance to industry and regulatory agencies in developing strategies to prevent listeriosis. ( JAMA . 1992;267:2046-2050)
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