Outsourcing PTs in the UK using the European Food Law Scheme · • Participants should test under...

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Outsourcing PTs in the UK using the European Food Law Scheme Shona Neal UK NRL for Food Microbiology

Transcript of Outsourcing PTs in the UK using the European Food Law Scheme · • Participants should test under...

Outsourcing PTs in the UK using

the European Food Law

Scheme

Shona Neal UK NRL for Food Microbiology

• UK-NRL structure

• Background to proficiency testing and provider

• OCL participation

• Example of European Food Microbiology legislation

Scheme (EFL) sample

• Preparation for Campylobacter Process Hygiene Criteria

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Content

UK – NRL

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Food microbiology NRL –

Public Health England (PHE)

Close liaison with Animal and

Plant Health Agency (APHA) –

Animal & Feed NRL

(Antimicrobial resistance,

Campylobacter, Salmonella)

UK Structure

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Other

laboratories

Official Control

Laboratories

National Reference Laboratory

UK’s Competent Authority

Food Standards

Agency (FSA)

PHE

FW&E network

(n= 3)

Other official control labs

(n=11)

Gastrointestinal

Bacteria

Reference Unit

(GBRU)

APHA

Campylobacter

EURL

Six core functions

1. Secretariat services (mostly

disseminating information)

2. Advice and representation within the

UK/EU (FSA, OCLs, other labs)

3. Production of standard operating

procedures, codes of practice and

guidance documents

4. Compliance assessment via audits

and ring trials (PTs and training!)

5. Co-ordination within the UK of EURL

initiatives

6. Communication of results and data

use

• Three dedicated staff for the NRL:

• Shona Neal, NRL Lead Scientist

• Amisha Vibhakar, NRL Project

Scientist

• Kalpna Lakhani, NRL

PA/Administrator

•Other key UK staff (Campylobacter):

• Jim McLauchlin, Project Lead and

Lead Microbiologist for PHE FW&E

Network

• Frieda Jorgensen, FW&E Senior

Scientist

• Kathie Grant, Head of GBRU

• Craig Swift, GBRU Clinical Scientist

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PTs for the UK OCLs

An audit was performed by the NRL to all 16 OCLs in 2013. It revealed:

• PT participation not standardised for UK OCLs

• Participation in multiple PT organisers (e.g., FEPTU, FSA, LGC,

CEFAS)

• Not possible to compare PT performance across all OCLs

NRL identified a scheme run by the Food & Environmental Proficiency

Test Unit (FEPTU)

European Food Microbiology Legislation Scheme

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European Food Microbiology Legislation Scheme

• Laboratories that examine foods for compliance with Regulation (EC)

2073/2005 and subsequent amendments

• Participants decide which examination and detection/enumeration required

• 12 simulated samples sent out in 4 batches each year

• Meat

• Dairy

• Ready-to-eat

• Miscellaneous

• The samples are LENTICULTED mixtures of organisms

• Unique scheme running for nine years

• Scheme is accredited against ISO 17043:2010: Competency assessment –

General requirements for proficiency testing

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Outsourcing PTs for the UK OCLs • The UK NRL fund participation of all OCLs in PHE European

Food Microbiology Legislation Scheme since 2014

• UK’s Competent Authority (FSA) have approved this outsourcing

• Between 11 and 13 UK OCLs sign up annually

Benefits

• Better awareness and understanding of the legislation

• Train staff in the specific methods used and maintains

competence

• Support available for long-term poor performance (none yet!)

• Experts (FEPTU) running the scheme, whilst UK-NRL can

focus on other core functions and still liaise closely with FEPTU

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Assessment of performance

• Identity of individual laboratories not known by NRL

• Consolidated report for all UK OCLs produced for each distribution, advice

and lessons learnt produced

• All laboratories encouraged to perform root cause analysis of poor

performance

• Poor laboratory performance:

• Failure to detect a pathogen or counts > or < 3 sd from participants’ mean

• If poor laboratory performance detected over three separate distributions

• Written invitation sent to laboratory from scheme provider asking if they would like

assistance from the NRL

• If poor laboratory performance over six distributions

• Competent authority informed

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Listeria EURL’s outsourcing PT guidance

• UK NRL nominated a participant on

the guidance working group

• The document has been circulated

amongst the EURLs and EC micro

criteria working group

• UK complies to most of the

guidance…

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UK-NRL differences in practice

EURL Guidance states… EFL scheme does…

Three contamination levels of known

organism

Organism is unknown and differs in

concentration, dependent on the

scenario/matrix

Using food matrices (simulates real

life samples)

Using lenticules (less time consuming,

more stable and generates consistent

comparable data)

Enumeration analysis using z-scores Scoring to correctly report micro

criteria and organism(s), batch

information, laboratory result and

conclusion. Enumeration based on

MADe and ‘0.5 log10 rule’

Guidance is (currently) only for Listeria UK-NRL is responsible for six areas →

if food matrices are required, this

would need significant human and

financial resources

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Example from EFL scheme – EFL 121

• RTE salad containing sprouted bean shoots, during shelf-life

• containing Listeria monocytogenes (50 cfu), Salmonella Anatum (33),

Enterococcus faecalis (37) and Escherichia coli (92)

• Participants should test under 1.2, 1.18/1.19 and 1.29 in micro criteria

• 11/13 OCLs returned results for this sample

Listeria enumeration (1.2)

• 10/11 OCLs correctly reported under 1.2

• 1 OCL reported under 1.3

• All used ISO 11290-2

• Participants’ median = 79 cfu (1.90 log10)

• Standard deviation of participants results = 0.29 log10

• FEPTU QC median = 49 cfu (1.70 log10)

• 10 OCLs interpreted and reported result correctly, scoring 8/8.

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Example – EFL 121 (cont) Salmonella detection (1.18/1.19)

• 11/11 OCLs correctly reported (8/8 points) under 1.18

• All used ISO 6579

STEC detection (1.29) – recent amendment to EU 2073/2005 in 2013

• 5/11 tested and correctly reported not detected

• 5/11 reported that STEC detection is required as part of 1.29

• These labs do not perform STEC detection

• 7/11 stated that ISO 13136 was used (or should be used)

• 1 lab incorrectly used ISO 16654

• 1/11 did not report that STEC is required

This is an improvement from sample sent in 2015 (EFL095)

• 2/12 tested for STEC under ISO 13136

• 5/12 stipulated STEC was required

• 4/12 did not examine

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One problem…. • EFL scheme does not include Campylobacter, because it is based on EU

2073/2005!

• FSA supported a PT scheme in spiked chicken neck-skin rinses but only for

a handful of OCLs – now ceased

• Therefore, UK-NRL have arranged to fund OCL participation to one

distribution of FEPTU’s Standard scheme in 2017-18 year

• Selected distribution 300, which contains Campylobacter detection and

enumeration

• Disadvantage is that participants know in advance what to test, as organism

content are known

• Dispatched in January 2018, 12/14 have consented for NRL to access their

results via anonymous reporting

FEPTU will include Campylobacter in the EFL scheme from 2018-19

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Training for OCL personnel

• Campylobacter workshop for detection and enumeration for UK OCLs

25th – 26th January 2017 • Eight people attended the two day course

• Theoretical and practical content, including;

• Processing samples

• Reading and interpreting colony counts and morphology

• Confirmatory tests for presumptive identification

• Sneaked in a RT-PCR demo too!

• Feedback was overall good

• Also organised similar workshop in October 2014

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Acknowledgements

• PHE FWE Microbiology Network

• PHE Food and Environment Proficiency Testing Unit

• The UK OCLs, FSA and the Campylobacter EURL!

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