Stelios Viazis, Amanda Conrad, Alexandra Palacios, Alexandra L. Busbee, Margaret Kirchner, Natalie Cataldo, Allison Wellman, Brett Weed, Christina K. Carstens, Victoria Wagoner, Laurel S. Burall, Joelle K. Salazar, Megan L. Fay, Kenneth Nieves, Zachary Miller, David T. Ingram, Stephen Hughes, Joseph Baugher, Robert Hatch, Scott Izyk, Grace Pederson, Allison Scott, Matthew C Kristof, Laurie Williams, Lauren Yeung, Cary Chen Parker, Michael C. Bazaco
{"title":"美国与进口Enoki蘑菇相关的李斯特菌病暴发调查综述以及相关的监管活动、研究和食品安全知识空白。","authors":"Stelios Viazis, Amanda Conrad, Alexandra Palacios, Alexandra L. Busbee, Margaret Kirchner, Natalie Cataldo, Allison Wellman, Brett Weed, Christina K. Carstens, Victoria Wagoner, Laurel S. Burall, Joelle K. Salazar, Megan L. Fay, Kenneth Nieves, Zachary Miller, David T. Ingram, Stephen Hughes, Joseph Baugher, Robert Hatch, Scott Izyk, Grace Pederson, Allison Scott, Matthew C Kristof, Laurie Williams, Lauren Yeung, Cary Chen Parker, Michael C. Bazaco","doi":"10.1111/1541-4337.70292","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>Foods implicated in listeriosis outbreaks continue to change over time. Historically, listeriosis outbreaks have been primarily linked to consumption of deli meat and dairy products. More recently, they have been linked to vegetable row crops, fruits, and other produce, including imported specialty mushrooms. Specialty mushrooms, including enoki mushrooms, are popular in Japanese, Chinese, and Korean cuisines, and are commonly used in soups, stir-fries, hotpots, and salads. These mushrooms are imported into the U.S. from a variety of East Asian countries and Canada. Recently, food safety authorities around the world have linked listeriosis outbreaks to contaminated enoki mushrooms, leading to a series of highly impactful recalls. This review examines outbreaks and recalls associated with enoki mushrooms, related risks and food safety concerns, ongoing research, regulatory activities focused on this commodity, consumer preparation and handling practices, and prevention strategies. The exchange of epidemiologic and traceback evidence, genomic data, and international data sharing helped investigators find the source of multiple listeriosis outbreaks linked to enoki mushrooms. Since enoki mushrooms were first linked to listeriosis illnesses in 2020, state, federal, and international partners developed a strategy for outbreak prevention, including enhanced surveillance and an improved investigational approach for this commodity.</p>","PeriodicalId":155,"journal":{"name":"Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety","volume":"24 5","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":14.1000,"publicationDate":"2025-09-16","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12441183/pdf/","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"An Overview of Listeriosis Outbreak Investigations in the United States Linked to Imported Enoki Mushrooms and Associated Regulatory Activities, Research, and Food Safety Knowledge Gaps\",\"authors\":\"Stelios Viazis, Amanda Conrad, Alexandra Palacios, Alexandra L. Busbee, Margaret Kirchner, Natalie Cataldo, Allison Wellman, Brett Weed, Christina K. Carstens, Victoria Wagoner, Laurel S. Burall, Joelle K. Salazar, Megan L. Fay, Kenneth Nieves, Zachary Miller, David T. Ingram, Stephen Hughes, Joseph Baugher, Robert Hatch, Scott Izyk, Grace Pederson, Allison Scott, Matthew C Kristof, Laurie Williams, Lauren Yeung, Cary Chen Parker, Michael C. Bazaco\",\"doi\":\"10.1111/1541-4337.70292\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p>Foods implicated in listeriosis outbreaks continue to change over time. Historically, listeriosis outbreaks have been primarily linked to consumption of deli meat and dairy products. More recently, they have been linked to vegetable row crops, fruits, and other produce, including imported specialty mushrooms. Specialty mushrooms, including enoki mushrooms, are popular in Japanese, Chinese, and Korean cuisines, and are commonly used in soups, stir-fries, hotpots, and salads. These mushrooms are imported into the U.S. from a variety of East Asian countries and Canada. Recently, food safety authorities around the world have linked listeriosis outbreaks to contaminated enoki mushrooms, leading to a series of highly impactful recalls. This review examines outbreaks and recalls associated with enoki mushrooms, related risks and food safety concerns, ongoing research, regulatory activities focused on this commodity, consumer preparation and handling practices, and prevention strategies. The exchange of epidemiologic and traceback evidence, genomic data, and international data sharing helped investigators find the source of multiple listeriosis outbreaks linked to enoki mushrooms. 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An Overview of Listeriosis Outbreak Investigations in the United States Linked to Imported Enoki Mushrooms and Associated Regulatory Activities, Research, and Food Safety Knowledge Gaps
Foods implicated in listeriosis outbreaks continue to change over time. Historically, listeriosis outbreaks have been primarily linked to consumption of deli meat and dairy products. More recently, they have been linked to vegetable row crops, fruits, and other produce, including imported specialty mushrooms. Specialty mushrooms, including enoki mushrooms, are popular in Japanese, Chinese, and Korean cuisines, and are commonly used in soups, stir-fries, hotpots, and salads. These mushrooms are imported into the U.S. from a variety of East Asian countries and Canada. Recently, food safety authorities around the world have linked listeriosis outbreaks to contaminated enoki mushrooms, leading to a series of highly impactful recalls. This review examines outbreaks and recalls associated with enoki mushrooms, related risks and food safety concerns, ongoing research, regulatory activities focused on this commodity, consumer preparation and handling practices, and prevention strategies. The exchange of epidemiologic and traceback evidence, genomic data, and international data sharing helped investigators find the source of multiple listeriosis outbreaks linked to enoki mushrooms. Since enoki mushrooms were first linked to listeriosis illnesses in 2020, state, federal, and international partners developed a strategy for outbreak prevention, including enhanced surveillance and an improved investigational approach for this commodity.
期刊介绍:
Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety (CRFSFS) is an online peer-reviewed journal established in 2002. It aims to provide scientists with unique and comprehensive reviews covering various aspects of food science and technology.
CRFSFS publishes in-depth reviews addressing the chemical, microbiological, physical, sensory, and nutritional properties of foods, as well as food processing, engineering, analytical methods, and packaging. Manuscripts should contribute new insights and recommendations to the scientific knowledge on the topic. The journal prioritizes recent developments and encourages critical assessment of experimental design and interpretation of results.
Topics related to food safety, such as preventive controls, ingredient contaminants, storage, food authenticity, and adulteration, are considered. Reviews on food hazards must demonstrate validity and reliability in real food systems, not just in model systems. Additionally, reviews on nutritional properties should provide a realistic perspective on how foods influence health, considering processing and storage effects on bioactivity.
The journal also accepts reviews on consumer behavior, risk assessment, food regulations, and post-harvest physiology. Authors are encouraged to consult the Editor in Chief before submission to ensure topic suitability. Systematic reviews and meta-analyses on analytical and sensory methods, quality control, and food safety approaches are welcomed, with authors advised to follow IFIS Good review practice guidelines.