Litcius/Paper detail

Hot topic: Avian influenza subtype H5N1 in US dairy—A preliminary dairy foods perspective

N.H. Martin, Aljoša Trmčić, Samuel D. Alcaine

2024JDS Communications14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

) in some cases. These high viral loads coupled with evidence that farm cats who consumed raw milk from clinically ill animals were infected and exhibited high mortality rates, raised concerns about the safety of the US milk supply for human consumption. To date, 4 cow-associated human infections have been reported, all from farm employees with direct contact with infected animals. Several parameters ultimately affect the theoretical public health risk from consumption of dairy products manufactured from a milk supply containing H5N1, namely (1) initial viral load, (2) persistence of H5N1 in raw milk, (3) viral inactivation through processing practices including pasteurization, and (4) human susceptibility and infectious dose. In the short period since the emergence of this disease in dairy cattle in the United States, research has begun to answer these critical questions, although our knowledge is still quite limited at this time. Here we review the literature available from the current H5N1 outbreak in US dairy cattle, as well as selected relevant literature from previous research in other animal agriculture sectors, that affect our current understanding of the parameters associated with the food safety risk of this disease in the US dairy supply chain.

Topics & Concepts

Influenza A virus subtype H5N1Perspective (graphical)BiologyVirologyComputer scienceVirusArtificial intelligenceInfluenza Virus Research StudiesViral gastroenteritis research and epidemiologyAnimal Disease Management and Epidemiology