The risk of acquiring avian influenza from commercial poultry products and hen eggs: A qualitative assessment

IF 3 4区 环境科学与生态学 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES Microbial Risk Analysis Pub Date : 2024-07-10 DOI:10.1016/j.mran.2024.100317
Erica Kintz , Wioleta J. Trzaska , Elaine Pegg , Wendy Perry , Alexander W. Tucker , Alec Kyriakides , Dragan Antic , Kathryn Callaghan , Anthony J. Wilson
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Abstract

High pathogenicity and low pathogenicity avian influenza (HPAI and LPAI) viruses primarily infect birds, but they can also cause illness in other species, including humans. Some avian influenza (AI) strains can cause fatality rates of over 50 % in human infections. In October 2021, there was a substantial increase in the number of AI infections reported in birds in the UK. Given concerns that more infected and/or contaminated poultry products might reach retail, a risk assessment was performed to ensure that advice relating to the handling and consumption of these products remained appropriate.

The products considered in this risk assessment were commercial chicken and turkey products, farmed duck and geese products, and table eggs. The risk pathway included the likelihood animals or eggs from an infected flock would be sent for further processing, whether the resulting products would be released to retail after inspection, viral persistence during distribution and storage, and the ability of AI viruses to infect humans via the gastrointestinal route. The risk from any AI virus, not just the A(H5N1) strain that began circulating in 2021, was considered. Data was obtained from literature searches and FSA surveys.

The risk assessment determined that the likelihood of human infection with AI from poultry products for the UK population from handling and consuming commercial chicken or turkey products was negligible with low uncertainty, and for farmed duck and geese products was very low with medium uncertainty. The likelihood of infection for people in the UK from handling and consuming hen table eggs was very low with low uncertainty. The uncertainty rankings relate to the differing amounts of data available for each group of poultry products. The severity of illness in humans from AI infection was considered high with medium uncertainty. The conclusions of this risk assessment for UK consumers largely reflected advice and assessments from other countries and previous UK assessments. Given this, current guidance for handling and consuming poultry products was considered appropriate despite the increase in infections in birds during the 2021/22 and 2022/23 avian flu seasons. Since AI viruses were considered generally, these risk characterisations may need to be revisited based on evidence specific to a circulating virus to support risk management decisions.

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从商业家禽产品和鸡蛋感染禽流感的风险:定性评估
高致病性和低致病性禽流感(HPAI 和 LPAI)病毒主要感染鸟类,但也会导致包括人类在内的其他物种患病。某些禽流感病毒株可导致人类感染者的死亡率超过 50%。2021 年 10 月,英国报告的禽类感染禽流感的数量大幅增加。鉴于人们担心可能会有更多受感染和/或受污染的家禽产品进入零售市场,因此进行了风险评估,以确保有关处理和食用这些产品的建议仍然适当。风险途径包括来自受感染鸡群的动物或鸡蛋被送去进一步加工的可能性、所生产的产品是否会在检查后被零售、病毒在分销和储存过程中的持续性,以及禽流感病毒通过胃肠道途径感染人类的能力。考虑的风险来自任何禽流感病毒,而不仅仅是 2021 年开始流行的 A(H5N1)病毒株。风险评估确定,英国人口因处理和食用商品鸡或火鸡产品而感染禽流感的可能性微乎其微,不确定性较低;因食用养殖鸭和鹅产品而感染禽流感的可能性极低,不确定性中等。英国人因处理和食用餐桌上的鸡蛋而感染禽流感的可能性非常低,不确定性较低。不确定性排名与每组家禽产品的可用数据量不同有关。人类因感染禽流感而患病的严重程度被认为很高,不确定性为中等。针对英国消费者的风险评估结论在很大程度上反映了其他国家的建议和评估以及英国以前的评估。有鉴于此,尽管在 2021/22 和 2022/23 年禽流感季节期间禽类感染率会上升,但目前关于处理和消费禽类产品的指导仍被认为是适当的。由于对禽流感病毒进行了总体考虑,因此可能需要根据针对某种流行病毒的具体证据重新审查这些风险特征,以支持风险管理决定。
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来源期刊
Microbial Risk Analysis
Microbial Risk Analysis Medicine-Microbiology (medical)
CiteScore
5.70
自引率
7.10%
发文量
28
审稿时长
52 days
期刊介绍: The journal Microbial Risk Analysis accepts articles dealing with the study of risk analysis applied to microbial hazards. Manuscripts should at least cover any of the components of risk assessment (risk characterization, exposure assessment, etc.), risk management and/or risk communication in any microbiology field (clinical, environmental, food, veterinary, etc.). This journal also accepts article dealing with predictive microbiology, quantitative microbial ecology, mathematical modeling, risk studies applied to microbial ecology, quantitative microbiology for epidemiological studies, statistical methods applied to microbiology, and laws and regulatory policies aimed at lessening the risk of microbial hazards. Work focusing on risk studies of viruses, parasites, microbial toxins, antimicrobial resistant organisms, genetically modified organisms (GMOs), and recombinant DNA products are also acceptable.
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