Mpatswenumugabo Jean Pierre, Mukasafari Marie Anne, Ndahetuye Jean Baptiste, Wredle Ewa, Båge Renée
Department of Veterinary Medicine, College of Agriculture, Animal Science and Veterinary Medicine, University of Rwanda, Nyagatare, Rwanda.
Department of Clinical Sciences, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Uppsala SE-750 07, Sweden.
J Appl Microbiol. 2023 Apr 3;134(4). doi: 10.1093/jambio/lxad080.
Consumption of unsafe animal-source foods is the major cause of foodborne disease outbreaks in low-income countries. Despite current knowledge of the threat posed by raw milk consumption to human health, people in many countries in East Africa still consume unboiled milk. This literature review explored the association between milk consumption and the occurrence of five milk-borne bacterial zoonoses: brucellosis, salmonellosis, campylobacteriosis, Escherichia coli infections, and tuberculosis. A search for literature published up to 1 October 2021 was conducted through the Web of Science, PubMed, and Scopus databases, using Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines. The selection process yielded 65 articles describing studies conducted in East Africa 2010-2021, which were carefully scrutinized. The most investigated pathogen was Brucella spp. (54.5%), followed by E. coli (18.2%), Salmonella spp. (12.1%), Mycobacterium spp. (6.1%), and E. coli O157: H7 (6.1%). The most common predisposing factors for potential milk-borne disease outbreaks were consumption of contaminated raw milk, inadequate cold storage along the milk value chain, poor milk handling practices, and lack of awareness of the health risks of consuming unpasteurized milk. Thus, a tailor-made training program is needed for all milk value chain actors to enhance the safety of milk sold in informal markets, and a One Health approach should be applied. Future studies should employ more advanced diagnostic techniques and countries in East Africa should invest in modern diagnostic tools and equipment, both in hospitals and in local rural settings where most cases occur.
在低收入国家,食用不安全的动物源食品是食源性疾病暴发的主要原因。尽管目前已知饮用生牛奶对人类健康构成威胁,但东非许多国家的人们仍饮用未经煮沸的牛奶。这篇文献综述探讨了牛奶消费与五种通过牛奶传播的细菌性人畜共患病(布鲁氏菌病、沙门氏菌病、弯曲菌病、大肠杆菌感染和结核病)发生之间的关联。利用系统评价和Meta分析的首选报告项目指南,通过科学网、PubMed和Scopus数据库对截至2021年10月1日发表的文献进行了检索。筛选过程产生了65篇描述2010 - 2021年在东非进行的研究的文章,并对其进行了仔细审查。研究最多的病原体是布鲁氏菌属(54.5%),其次是大肠杆菌(18.2%)、沙门氏菌属(12.1%)、分枝杆菌属(6.1%)和大肠杆菌O157: H7(6.1%)。潜在的牛奶传播疾病暴发最常见的诱发因素是食用受污染的生牛奶、牛奶价值链中冷藏不足、牛奶处理方法不当以及缺乏对饮用未杀菌牛奶健康风险的认识。因此,需要为所有牛奶价值链参与者制定量身定制的培训计划,以提高在非正式市场销售的牛奶的安全性,并且应采用“同一健康”方法。未来的研究应采用更先进的诊断技术,东非各国应在医院和大多数病例发生的当地农村地区投资于现代诊断工具和设备。