1 / 30

Public health risks represented by certain composite products containing food of animal origin

Public health risks represented by certain composite products containing food of animal origin. Pietro Stella - Unit on Biological Hazards SCoFCAH – 19 February 2013. EFSA Scientific Opinion. Mandate from European Commission in March 2011

brandi
Télécharger la présentation

Public health risks represented by certain composite products containing food of animal origin

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Public health risks represented by certain composite products containing food of animal origin Pietro Stella - Unit on Biological Hazards SCoFCAH – 19 February 2013

  2. EFSA Scientific Opinion • Mandate from European Commission in March 2011 • Scientific Opinion adopted by the BIOHAZ Panel in April 2012

  3. Composite products “a foodstuff intended for human consumption that contains both processed products of animal origin and products of plant origin and includes those where the processing of primary product is an integral part of the production of the final product” (Decision 2007/275/EC)

  4. Background of the mandate • Currently imports of composite products into the EU are subject to rules relating to: • Public health • Animal health • Regulation 853/2004: Processed products of animal origin used to prepare composite products must be produced in a EU approved plant and controlled at BIPs • Regulation 1162/2009: Derogation until 31/12/2013 • Decision 2007/275/EC: Veterinary checks at BIPs are foreseen for composite products when they contain: • processed meat product • ≥50% other processed animal product • … • Derogation for a specific list of products (see next slide) Commission needs to develop harmonised risk-based public health rules

  5. Terms of reference (ToRs) Recommend/identify physico-chemical parameters for composite products containing no meat and/or less than 50% of products of animal origin, that could be relevant for the growth/survival of pathogenic microorganisms of public health importance, taking into account the importance of other factors such as processing conditions, transport and/or storage conditions, and therefore assisting the risk manager on deciding to carry out risk based controls. All composite products coveredby the mandate

  6. Terms of reference (ToRs) Identify and profile the microbiological hazards for public health related to import of certain composite products containing no meat and/or less than 50% of products of animal origin. In the first instance the following list of products should be assessed: • Biscuits • Bread • Cakes • Chocolate • Confectionery including sweets) • Unfilled gelatine capsules • Food supplements • Olives stuffed with fish • Pasta and noodles • Meat extracts and meat concentrates • Soup stocks and flavorings Certainspecific composite products

  7. Composite products

  8. Approach taken • Identify physico-chemical parameters: • Hazards in composite products • Risk factors related to composite products • Review of food predictive microbiology modelling tools • Definition of parameters having impact on survival and growth of microorganisms in composite products • Identify and profile • microbiological hazards: • Review information on hazards in certain composite products • (list in the mandate) • Development of a tool to rank/categorise risks from those hazards in those composite products

  9. Biological hazards (in composite products) • Hazards from animal, human and environmental reservoir: • carried by the ingredients • contaminating the food during its preparation • In practice, all the microbial hazards commonly transmitted by foods • Categorisation of hazards with respect to their need to growth in food to cause illness: categories of hazards with similar behaviour • useful to identify physico-chemical parameters • useful later to rank/categorise risks in composite products

  10. Biological hazards (in composite products)

  11. Factors impacting on risk (in composite products) • Review of factors influencing survival and growth • Intrinsic factors (aw, pH, Eh) • Processing factors (heating, chemical decontamination, irradiation) • Extrinsic or environmental factors (temperature, humidity of storage) • Implicit factors (developing microflora) • Examples provided in the Opinion

  12. Factors impacting on risk (in composite products) • Predictive microbiology: using mathematical equations to summarise information on microbial responses in foods under different conditions and provide estimations

  13. General conclusions on ToR 1 (physico-chemical parameters) • From conclusions of the Opinion:

  14. General conclusions on ToR 1 (physico-chemical parameters) • From conclusions of the Opinion:

  15. Forward approach Backward approach RISK Raw material Processing Distribution storage Preparation Consumption Foodborne illness Ranking hazard/composite product combinations Providing to the risk manager a tool to perform risk-based controls: Ranking risks from composite products through 2 approaches: Based on characteristics of hazards/foods/processing Based on past data

  16. “Forward approach” • Data needed: • Hazard-related data: pathogenicity, spores, toxins, survival and growth… • Food-related data: pH, aw… • Processing-related data: pasteurisation, freezing, cooking… • Methods: • EFSA WG developeddecisiontrees • foreachof the 3 hazardcategories

  17. “Forward approach” Illnessmayoccurwithoutgrowthofhazards in the food Low = inactivation or prevention hazardous level Moderate = hazardmaybepresent, consider e.g. cross-contaminationotherfoods, typeofcooking QualifiedPresumptionofRisk = ifpresent, pathogenhas the potentialto cause disease. Further information needed, including info from “backwardapproach”

  18. “Forward approach” Growthofhazards in the foodis usuallyrequiredto cause illness

  19. “Forward approach” Growthofhazards in the food isrequiredfor production oftoxins or toxicmetabolitesthat cause illness

  20. “Forward approach” • Ranking through a table

  21. “Forward approach” • Overall results

  22. “Backward approach” • (Past) data needed: • Prevalence data • Outbreak data • RASFF alerts • Reports in scientific literature

  23. “Backward approach” • EU foodborne outbreak data (2004-2009)

  24. “Backward approach” • Prevalence (2004-2009), RASFF (2001-2011), scientific papers

  25. “Backward approach” • (Past) data needed: • Prevalence data • Outbreak data • RASFF alerts • Reports in scientific literature • Methods: • Listing and discussing evidence available • Expert opinion: • Experts provided criteria and • scores to establish the relevance • of each combination for each • source of data • Calculation of scores based • on those criteria • Calculation of average scores • Establishment of thresholds to define level of importance of combinations

  26. “Backward approach” • Overall results

  27. General conclusions on ToR 2 (ranking of composite products) • From conclusions of the Opinion on “forward approach”:

  28. General conclusions on ToR 2 (ranking of composite products) • From conclusions of the Opinion on “backward approach”: • In addition:

  29. Integration of the two approaches • The two approaches are complementary, to be applied in parallel • Forward approach should prevail over the results of the backward approach, because it is based on the food characteristics and can take into account the diversity of the composite products and possible future changes • Trees indicate a low risk  due to the intrinsic composition or processing of the food, independently of past information available • Trees indicate a risk for a given hazard/product  this risk can then be further qualified with the past data available

  30. Thank you for your attention! • Acknowledgments: • EFSA BIOHAZ Panel • EFSA WG on composite products: Christophe Nguyen-The (chair), Olivier Cerf, Kostas Koutsoumanis, John Sofos, Antonio Valero, Marcel Zwietering • Contacts in EFSA: • biohaz@efsa.europa.eu • pietro.stella@efsa.europa.eu • http://www.efsa.europa.eu/en/contact/askefsa.htm

More Related