Raw milk cheese suspected in French Campylobacter outbreak

An outbreak of a rare type of Campylobacter in France was caused by unpasteurized, raw milk cheese, according to a study.

In June 2021, seven Campylobacter fetus infections occurred in a rehabilitation center in . All patients were female, and the median age was 79 with a range of 70 to 90 years old.

Reasons for being at the center were post-orthopedic surgery reeducation in five people and or rehabilitation after acute myeloid leukemia chemotherapy in one person each.

Campylobacter jejuni and Campylobacter coli cause the majority of campylobacteriosis. A small proportion is caused by Campylobacter fetus but outbreaks are rare. Although Campylobacter fetus may occasionally cause , it is more associated with and bacteremia. Such infections are more commonly reported in older and immunocompromised patients, according to the study published in the journal Frontiers in .

All patients had mild watery without nausea or . Five had but all of them recovered. Whole genome sequencing of the different Campylobacter fetus strains confirmed a common source.

In five patients who undertook a blood culture analysis, Campylobacter fetus was isolated only in the blood of three patients and from blood and stool in two of them.

Suspicion falls on raw milk cheese
Epidemiological work found three patients at the start of June followed by four infections later in June. An investigation of the eaten by five patients revealed the consumption of unpasteurized cheese made from cow’s milk of the Tomme des Pyrénées variety.

Another unpasteurized cheese made from cow’s milk, a Camembert, was also consumed before for some patients. It was not possible to clearly incriminate one of the two different raw milk cheeses. They were served as part of a recently implemented farm-to-fork strategy. Such strategies were pursued but unpasteurized dairy products were…

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