Listeria monocytogenes Illness and Deaths Associated With Ongoing Contamination of a Multiregional Brand of Ice Cream Products, United States, 2010–2015

Author:

Conrad Amanda R12,Tubach Sheri3,Cantu Venessa4,Webb Lindsey Martin3,Stroika Steven2,Moris Steve5,Davis Megan6,Hunt D Charles3,Bradley Kristy K7,Kucerova Zuzana2,Strain Errol8,Doyle Matthew8,Fields Angela8,Neil Karen P2,Gould L Hannah2,Jackson Kelly A2,Wise Matthew E2,Griffin Patricia M2,Jackson Brendan R2

Affiliation:

1. Atlanta Research and Education Foundation , Atlanta, Georgia , USA

2. Division of Foodborne, Waterborne, and Environmental Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention , Atlanta, Georgia , USA

3. Bureau of Epidemiology and Public Health Informatics, Kansas Department of Health and Environment , Topeka, Kansas , USA

4. Emerging and Acute Infectious Disease Unit, Texas Department of State Health Services , Austin, Texas , USA

5. Division of Food Safety and Lodging, Kansas Department of Agriculture , Manhattan, Kansas , USA

6. Microbiology Division, South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control , Columbia, South Carolina , USA

7. Oklahoma State Department of Health , Oklahoma City, Oklahoma , USA

8. Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition, US Food and Drug Administration , College Park, Maryland , USA

Abstract

Abstract Background Frozen foods have rarely been linked to Listeria monocytogenes illness. We describe an outbreak investigation prompted by both hospital clustering of illnesses and product testing. Methods We identified outbreak-associated listeriosis cases using whole-genome sequencing (WGS), product testing results, and epidemiologic linkage to cases in the same Kansas hospital. We reviewed hospital medical and dietary records, product invoices, and molecular subtyping results. Federal and state officials tested product and environmental samples for L. monocytogenes. Results Kansas officials were investigating 5 cases of listeriosis at a single hospital when, simultaneously, unrelated sampling for a study in South Carolina identified L. monocytogenes in Company A ice cream products made in Texas. Isolates from 4 patients and Company A products were closely related by WGS, and the 4 patients with known exposures had consumed milkshakes made with Company A ice cream while hospitalized. Further testing identified L. monocytogenes in ice cream produced in a second Company A production facility in Oklahoma; these isolates were closely related by WGS to those from 5 patients in 3 other states. These 10 illnesses, involving 3 deaths, occurred from 2010 through 2015. Company A ultimately recalled all products. Conclusions In this US outbreak of listeriosis linked to a widely distributed brand of ice cream, WGS and product sampling helped link cases spanning 5 years to 2 production facilities, indicating longstanding contamination. Comprehensive sanitation controls and environmental and product testing for L. monocytogenes with regulatory oversight should be implemented for ice cream production.

Funder

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) Epidemiology and Laboratory Capacity for Infectious Diseases

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Microbiology (medical)

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